Dayton Daily News

Fire damages Frank Lloyd Wright house

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A homemade billboard declaring “ODOT Sucks” to drivers on Route 161 has graced the side of an uninhabite­d house for more than a decade. But the property has been sold, and the new owner is renovating the house, leaving the fate of the sign in question.

T he infamous “ODOT Sucks” house is under new management and big changes are coming to the property.

For over a decade, drivers in Pataskala looking north on Route 161 just west of Route 310 have had their attention drawn to a monument to civil disobedien­ce: a large yellow sign with red capital let- ters declaring “ODOT Sucks” attached to the south-facing side of an uninhabite­d, sin- gle-family dwelling on Jersey Mills Road.

Matthew Martin, 35, pur- chased the property in May 2018 from John Boesch, 56, who crafted and raised the sign. Martin has since begun renovation­s, including a new roof, and aims to make it “one of the nicest houses on the block.”

So what does that mean for the sign?

“Obviously, I haven’t taken it down yet,” Martin said. And surprising­ly, he’s con- sidering leaving it up in perpetuity. “We’ll just have to wait and see.”

But why would a new homeowner doing major renovation­s even entertain the idea of leaving up a sign that the uninitiate­d would call vandalism? Martin doesn’t share Boesch’s grievance against the state agency. In fact, he said ODOT has been instrument­al in restoring the property by quickly addressing a drainage issue. He can’t say if the agency responded quickly because of the sign, but did say the person he spoke with when he reported the issue immediatel­y recognized the address as being around ODOT’s “favorite house.”

Martin does, however, recognize the symbolic meaning behind the message.

“When this freeway came through,” Martin said, gesturing toward Route 161, “it really affected this community deeply.” Though Martin grew up in California, he remembers the quiet Pataskala community from summer visits to a fami- ly-owned farm in the area. “A lot of families were torn apart by it.”

That’s exactly what Boesch, who could not be reached by The Dispatch for this story, said he wanted people to remember when they saw the makeshift billboard.

“They’re going to remember it as long as I’m still breathing,” he said in a 2013 interview with the Newark Advocate. “People need to realize ... people suffered to have this nice freeway.”

In late 2005, ODOT filed a civil suit in Licking County against Boesch and his wife, Pamela. The department was offering $154,150 to appropriat­e a little more than a quarter of the couple’s 1-acre lot needed for the Routes 161/37 expressway expansion, according to court documents.

But the section of land ODOT needed forced the removal of the home’s sep- tic system, making it unin- habitable, Boesch told the Advocate.

After more than a year, the couple reached an agree- ment with ODOT for about $20,000 more than the original valuation.

The family purchased land in 2005 in Johnstown, where they built the house they currently live in. However, Boesch told the Advocate the ODOT settlement money arrived long after the new home was built, forcing them to pay out-of-pocket for the expenses.

Boesch’s story was not unusual. For several years during the highway’s constructi­on, countless reports of lives being uprooted and homeowners battling for just compensati­on were reported in The Dispatch and other local papers — for the convenienc­e of shaving 13 min- utes off a trip between Newark and Columbus.

So in 2008, when the first stretch of Route 161 opened, Boesch put the sign up. For the next 10 years, he main- tained it.

Countless people have seen the sign. Some have understood its message, including ODOT employees.

“While we’ve never agreed with the sentiment it expressed, this sign has always served as a reminder to ODOT of the very real impact our projects have on the people of Ohio,” ODOT spokesman Matt Bruning said in an emailed statement.

“I think they messed with the wrong guy,” Martin said, adding Boesch was incredibly knowledgea­ble about eminent domain laws and the First Amendment in discussion­s they had prior to him purchasing the prop- erty for $13,000.

Martin often wondered what the story behind the sign was when he would drive by the house. Upon learning what happened to Boesch, he now sees it as an act of catharsis for those affected by the highway.

“It’s beautiful. It’s such a short, concise statement,” he said. “It’s almost like art to me. It conveys emotion.”

Still, changes are coming to the property. The noise from the freeway is still an issue, which Martin plans to address with sound-proof- ing and other changes. He’s considerin­g installing a leach bed for a septic system on the adjacent property, which he also owns.

If Martin decides to take the sign down, he said that doesn’t mean it will go in the dumpster. He’s considered keeping it, auctioning it off for charity or selling it and using the funds to help pay for the renovation.

Whatever Martin decides, the community, ODOT and thousands of Route 161 com- muters will notice.

“We’re very interested to see what the future holds for this legendary Licking County landmark,” Bruning said.

Authoritie­s say a fire at a Cincinnati home designed by famed American architect Frank Lloyd Wright caused about $100,000 in damage.

Fire officials say t he blaze was contained to a front room that was heav- ily damaged and that there is smoke damage throughout the home.

No one was injured in the fire discovered Thursday night while the owners were out of town. The cause is being investigat­ed.

The home known as the Boulter House sold in March for $630,000.

Its former owners spent about 15 years restoring the house to its original design and adding modern updates.

It’s one of three homes in Cincinnati designed by Wright.

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