Los Angeles Times

‘Emoji house’ goes up for sale

- By Colleen Shalby Times staff writers Alexa Diaz and Jack Flemming contribute­d to this report.

Owner puts hot-pink home at center of Manhattan Beach dispute on market.

The emoji-sporting hotpink house that launched a neighborho­od brouhaha in Manhattan Beach is on the market.

The beach-adjacent property was listed Monday for $1.749 million, two weeks after homeowners and renters in the El Porto neighborho­od raised objections to the paint job at a City Council meeting.

The battle between homeowner Kathryn Kidd and her neighbors started in May, when residents reported Kidd to the city for illegally using her property for short-term rentals, such as Airbnb. After Kidd was fined $4,000 for violating the city’s rental laws, the once-beige property was painted a loud pink, adorned with two yellow emoji faces. The unfolding saga was first reported by Easy Reader News.

Kidd purchased the 1931built duplex in March 2018 for $1.35 million. According to Zillow, the property on 39th Street was listed in December 2018 for $1.99 million, before it was pulled from the market a few months later. Now it’s up for sale again.

Not surprising­ly, the listing makes no mention of the neighborho­od commotion or its the home’s external makeover. Its interior amenities, four-car garage and ocean views are detailed instead. According to property data provider CoreLogic, the median sales price in July for single-family homes in the 90266 ZIP Code was $3.063 million, up 30.2% year over year.

Some neighbors think the painted emojis are intended to mock them. A tongue-wagging face with eyes darting in opposite directions sits above another with a zipper across its mouth. Both emojis feature long eyelashes, a characteri­stic that neighbor Susan Wieland thinks is meant to poke fun at her eyelash extensions. The artist who spray-painted the design onto the house, known as Z the Art, posted a photo of his work on Instagram in May with the hashtags #TheEmojiHo­use and #eyelashext­ensions. The original caption, since deleted, read: “Are your neighbors constantly ratting you out? Have they cost you thousands in fines? Why risk a case when you can send them a pretty message?”

Kidd dismissed the idea that the emojis were intended to mock anyone.

“I’m trying not to offend anybody,” she told Easy Reader News. “I did it for the purpose of being happy, being positive, and I think it’s cute and quirky and kind of funny, and certainly was a time for the emoji.”

City Council members said they have no control over the design of the house. One member recommende­d that residents consider suing Kidd.

According to MB Confidenti­al, a local real estate blog written by broker Dave Fratello, some neighbors have inquired about buying the property. It’s unclear whether new owners would keep the pink palette, but Fratello says now may be a good time to sell for someone trying to avoid a suit or further confrontat­ion.

“What you do with a famous property, if your goal all along was profit, is try to sell it at the very moment that everyone is talking about it,” he wrote. “That’s one way to escape an extended conflict with the government and nearby homeowners.”

 ?? Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times ?? THE MANHATTAN BEACH home that has roiled the neighborho­od is listed for $1.749 million.
Kent Nishimura Los Angeles Times THE MANHATTAN BEACH home that has roiled the neighborho­od is listed for $1.749 million.

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