EDITORIAL
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For the past months, Costa Mesa Mayor Libby Cowan and Councilwoman
Linda Dixon have been fighting to preserve the Huscroft House. Last week,
they lost their battle when the council decided to put the house up for
sale instead of restoring it and moving it from TeWinkle Park to Fairview
Park.
Throughout the debate, the argument circled around two issues: is the
house -- a 1912 Craftsman-style home that wasn’t brought to the city
until 1954 -- really a part of the city’s history and should taxpayer
money be used to restore it? The council, in its decision, essentially
said “no” to both.
Fortunately for those who believe otherwise, it appears that private
individuals are stepping in to save the building. Within the first three
days following the council’s decision, two potential buyers have
appeared, intent on keeping the Huscroft House from the wrecking ball.
It is good the house is being saved, and it is for the best that it is
being done with private dollars. The ideas being tossed around for its
future -- as a tea room or a bed and breakfast, for instance -- are also
heartening to hear because they would allow the public to still use and
enjoy the house, even if it’s as a commercial enterprise.
Certainly, that is better than the alternative: the house being
destroyed.
Regardless of how historic one thinks the building is, it would be a
shame for it to be lost. Once gone, the house cannot be replaced. The
city, in whatever way it can, should help to ensure one of the
prospective buyers can save it.
Historic or not, the Huscroft House should not become history.
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