Eminent demolition
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Bryce Alderton
Visionaries transformed a seafood restaurant once owned by actress
Mary Pickford into a place of worship eight years ago.
Now church leaders want something more.
For three years church leaders at St. Peter’s By the Sea Presbyterian
Church have had another vision -- one that does not include a house they
consider an eyesore. This new vision would demolish a house that sits on
the same property as their church so that they might build a new
sanctuary and multipurpose room. These new facilities could more than
double attendance for Sunday services, said Jene Alexander, a church
elder.
The realization of the vision is finally in sight.
On the lot that sits at the corner of Warner Avenue and Bolsa Chica
Street there is the church, a tennis court, the house and a pool.
The Spano family once owned the house and property that church members
began complaining about in October 2000, said Bill Zylla who oversees the
city’s code enforcement operations.
Linda Francis Spano owned 75% of the property and her son Joe owned
25%. But the county took over Linda Spano’s portion when she checked into
a county mental health facility leaving the county and Joe Spano as
co-owners.
The county turned over the parcel of land that includes the house and
the pool to the city. The city in turn condemned the house and plans to
tear it down and fill in the swimming pool, said planning director Howard
Zelefsky. First the City Council needs to approve the demolition.
Church officials have long awaited the impending demolition.
“We’ve wanted this thing cleaned up and abated for three years,”
Alexander said. “There is a public health problem that exists.”
The ramshackle neighboring house has been filled with problems, said
Curt Jones, a 45-year Huntington Beach resident and two-year church
member.
Among the list of complaints Jones has are that the house has been
home to transients who sleep and drink on the property, multiple fires
that have been set, stenches coming from a water well and a pool that
Jones alleges hasn’t been cleaned in years.
“Parents are concerned about the danger the house is to their
children,” he said. “The church has been robbed twice.”
The county posted signs condemning the house and Huntington Beach
officials hope to have a contractor on board within the next two weeks to
demolish the property, Zelefsky said.
But one city official wants to make sure the city follows the law
before he agrees to let any wrecking ball swing.
“We can’t trespass,” said Mayor Pro Tem Ralph Bauer. “We need to have
due process, we can’t violate the law.”
But property owners haven’t brought any challenges to demolishing the
house, Zelefsky said.
The church is already in escrow to purchase the portion of the site
owned by Joe Spano and hopes to nab the rest once its cleaned up.
Building a larger sanctuary and multipurpose room would increase
attendance to what Jones described as a growing church body.
“The church has continued to grow,” he said. “We’ve prayed about this
a lot. There could be more praise to God to thank him how much he’s done
for us.”
* BRYCE ALDERTON is the news assistant. He can be reached at (714)
965-7173 or by e-mail at [email protected]
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