East Bay Times

Yabba Dabba Doo! Settlement reached in ‘Flintstone House’ case.

Barney, Betty and other quirky prehistori­c decor at the Hillsborou­gh home can remain

- By Emily DeRuy ederuy@bayareanew­sgroup.com

After a yearslong legal battle, the quirky, colorful prehistori­c decor dotting the socalled Flintstone House will be allowed to stay.

According to the Palo Alto Daily Post, Florence Fang and the town of Hillsborou­gh recently settled a 2019 lawsuit stemming from allegation­s that Fang had failed to get approval to add dinosaurs and a large sign reading “Yabba Dabba Doo,” among other things, to the yard surroundin­g her whimsical orange and purple home, which is very visible from Interstate 280.

The settlement agreement reportedly says Hillsborou­gh will pay Fang, a retired media mogul whose family used to own the San Francisco Examiner, $125,000 to cover costs associated with the lawsuit and approve permits for the changes made to the home. Fang, who is in her mid-80s, will drop her claims. She has said the city had stymied her initial attempts to get permits, and she suggested that she was discrimina­ted against for be

ing Asian.

Attempts by this news organizati­on to reach Fang on Saturday and Sunday were not successful, and the Angela Alioto Law Group, which is representi­ng Fang, did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment. An attorney for Hillsborou­gh also did not immediatel­y respond to a request for comment.

Case records show attorneys for both Fang and Hillsborou­gh filed requests for dismissal in late April.

Designed in the 1970s by William Nicholson, the unusual dome-shaped home sat for several years without a buyer until Fang scooped up the nearly 3,000-squarefoot Bay Area landmark in 2017 for $2.8 million.

Soon, she was adorning the property with the controvers­ial dinosaur statues and other eccentric sculptures that would lead to legal woes.

“Before, passing by, I always wondered who’s living in that house. Now I’m the one,” Fang told this news organizati­on in 2018.

She isn’t the only one who has wondered about the unique structure that resembles the cave-like homes featured in the popular “Flintstone­s” cartoon series that ran on TV in the 1960s.

On Saturday afternoon, several selfie-seeking tourists parked their car near the home on quiet Berryessa Way and approached a padlocked gate, bearing both a “no trespassin­g” posting and a sign emblazoned with the phrase, “Life is so good.”

Before them were cartoonish red-capped mushrooms, bright green cactuses and, off to the right under some shade, a cluster of baby dinosaurs hatching from pastel eggs — seemingly unaware of the legal battle they had just weathered.

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 ?? KARL MONDON — STAFF ARCHIVES ?? The famous ‘Flintstone House’ in Hillsborou­gh is allowed to stay after a yearslong lawsuit involving permits.
KARL MONDON — STAFF ARCHIVES The famous ‘Flintstone House’ in Hillsborou­gh is allowed to stay after a yearslong lawsuit involving permits.

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