San Diego Union-Tribune

RESTORATIO­N OF OLD LA JOLLA COTTAGES SLOW-MOVING

One burned down, other was damaged in fire; permit process ‘lengthy’

- BY ASHLEY MACKIN-SOLOMON

Much like the decay of La Jolla’s historic Red Roost and Red Rest cottages has been slow, such is the case with their planned restoratio­n after a fire last year. Crews and San Diego city representa­tives were onsite recently on Coast Boulevard to determine how to stabilize and preserve the structures — the first step in what is expected to be a lengthy process.

The cottages are considered The Village’s oldest structures.

Red Rest burned down in the fire early Oct. 26, and Red Roost was damaged. The cottages (sometimes referred to as bungalows) were listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1976.

On Nov. 2, city historical resources and code enforcemen­t staff and a building inspector visited the site to assess the damage, San Diego senior planner Suzanne Segur said at the San Diego Historical Resources Board’s March meeting.

A civil penalty notice was issued to the property’s ownership Dec. 11 saying that since the fire, “the bungalows have fallen into states of disrepair due to lack of maintenanc­e and neglect. The historical resources regulation­s of the land developmen­t code re

quire property owners to maintain the historical integrity of unoccupied designated historical resources.”

The property and the adjacent La Jolla Cove Suites were sold in 2018 to a group of investors in the hotel business. At the time of the fire, the cottages were uninhabite­d and covered by protective tarps.

The Red Rest and Red Roost, built in 1894 for George Leovy and Dr. Joseph

Fishburn, respective­ly, have stood at 1187 and 1179 Coast Blvd. virtually unmaintain­ed for three decades in what preservati­onists have called “demolition by neglect.”

The notice required the owners to submit an applicatio­n to stabilize the structures before performing any restoratio­n work. Since then, the owners informally submitted stabilizat­ion plans, and staff of the city Developmen­t Services Department is reviewing them.

“The new owners are very committed to properly caring

for the Red Roost and Red Rest,” said La Jolla architect Paul Benton, representi­ng the owners. “They now are working with the city on stabilizat­ion and preservati­on of the existing structures while looking ahead to a thoughtful plan for the long-term future of the cottages and their surroundin­gs. Profession­als have been onsite as part of the research and planning for the stabilizat­ion and preservati­on work.”

He said he couldn’t elaborate on the stabilizat­ion measures until they are

approved by the city.

The civil penalty notice further required that the owners “obtain all required permits for work to come into compliance with all the historic resources regulation­s,” Segur said. “City staff is currently working with the owners to stabilize the firedamage­d Red Rest while working on developmen­t plans for the site, which will most likely require a discretion­ary permit, (which is) a lengthy process.”

 ?? K.C. ALFRED U-T ?? One of two cottages considered the oldest structures in La Jolla was destroyed by a fire on Oct. 26.
K.C. ALFRED U-T One of two cottages considered the oldest structures in La Jolla was destroyed by a fire on Oct. 26.

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