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Prior to any City building permits issued for the pavilion, the property owner shall <br /> obtain final City approval for any and all required building permits related to the <br /> conversion of an unpermitted structure into an Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU). <br /> Approval of the CUP shall become null and void if the required building permits for <br /> the ADU are not finalized pursuant to all City requirements within two calendar <br /> years. <br /> The above-recommended condition ensures that the property owner obtains the <br /> necessary approvals for the construction of the ADU. If for some reason the ADU <br /> permit does not get issued, then the PBA would not issue a building permit for the <br /> proposed pavilion and the CUP would become null and void. Moreover, the matter <br /> would be referred to the City's Code Enforcement Division to address the <br /> unpermitted alterations to the pool house/cabana. The property owner would be <br /> required to remove the unpermitted work and return the structure back to the <br /> original conditions. <br /> 3. Appellant Request. We request that The Historical Commission review all <br /> Landmark/Historical/Mills Act Compliance deficiencies and identify actions <br /> required to bring the property back to original standard. <br /> Analysis of Issue: The property is listed as a Landmark historic property, Number <br /> 354 on Santa Ana Register of Historic Properties ("Register"). Pursuant to Chapter <br /> 30 (Places Of Historical and Architectural Significance) of the SAMC, listed historic <br /> structures (e.g., primary structure and/or accessory structures identified as <br /> contributing to historic nature) are protected from physical exterior alterations or <br /> modifications. The SAMC defines modification as, "Any change, alteration, <br /> restoration, remodeling, rehabilitation, construction, or relocation of the physical <br /> exterior of a historic structure." Moreover, Section 30-6 (a) of the SAMC states <br /> that, "No exterior physical modifications, other than those identified by the historic <br /> resources commission for administrative approval by city staff, shall be permitted <br /> with respect to an historic structure until the historic resources commission <br /> approves such request at a duly noticed public hearing and issues a certificate of <br /> appropriateness." <br /> Recognizing the need to preserve and protect these listed historic structures, the <br /> SAMC also permits modifications (i.e., exterior alterations)that do not substantially <br /> change the character and integrity of the historic property. These are alterations <br /> that follow the Secretary of the Interior's Standards ("SOIS") for the Treatment of <br /> Historic Properties with Guidelines for Preserving, Rehabilitating, Restoring, & <br /> Reconstructing Historic Buildings (Kay D. Weeks and Anne E. Grimmer, revised <br /> 2017). Moreover, Historic Resources Commission (HRC) Resolution No. 2006-01 <br /> outlines limited exterior physical modifications to historic properties that can be <br /> reviewed administratively by City staff. Examples include, but are not limited to, <br /> like-for-like repairs or replacements using the same material and style as the <br /> original; restoration of architectural features that are documented through pictorial <br /> Resolution No. 2024-071 <br /> Page 8 of 16 <br />