Local company to build Sunset’s Idea Home
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Barbara Diamond
A Laguna Beach builder of playhouses to palatial custom homes has
been selected to construct Sunset magazine’s Idea Home for 2005.
“It’s a huge honor,” said Three Arch Bay resident David Mulvaney,
president of 5-year-old Mulvaney & Co. Inc.
Sunset chose Mulvaney’s company to build the Idea Home after being
introduced to the builder by developers DMB, a partner of Mission
Viejo Co.
“We had several meetings and looked at past Sunset projects,” said
Mulvaney. “They had some recommendations on the type and style of the
home.”
The house will be built in Ladera Ranch, being developed by
Mission Viejo Co. Mulvaney is one of five builders working in the
Covenant Hills community of the development, chosen, he said, from an
extensive list of high-end construction companies.
“I am currently their top company -- the go-to guy,” Mulvaney
said. “If they need something done, they call me.”
Mulvaney is working with architect Eric Trabert of Eric Trabert
and Associates on the Sunset project, which has a July 1, 2005
completion deadline.
“It’s a very tight schedule,” Mulvaney said.
The home will be a light craftsman style made famous by Green and
Green of Pasadena.
“Green and Green is dark, heavy and people today are looking for
something more airy,” Mulvaney said. “Instead of the dark, paneling,
the Idea Home walls will be lighter painted surfaces, but some of the
details will be familiar.”
Mulvaney likes the craftsman style, but his own home is more in
the Spanish style, with a “Caribbean flair.”
“It has mahogany doors and Venetian plaster on the walls,”
Mulvaney said. “I didn’t build it, but I remodeled the interior.”
He lives there with his wife, Linda, and their youngest child,
Brennen, a Thurston Middle School student. The Mulvaney’s also have
two older children, Shannon, 27, and Keith, 23.
Laguna has been home to Mulvaney for 22 years. He has been in the
construction business since he graduated from high school. He started
as an apprentice carpenter after earning a construction degree from
Orange Coast College and worked his way up the ladder.
“It’s the best way to learn construction,” Mulvaney said.
Mulvaney has built custom homes in Laguna Beach, but he mostly
works elsewhere.
He said the city’s design review process, scheduled to be reviewed
by task force, is adversarial by its very nature, although the design
criteria is probably the most liberal in the county. .
“The most difficult part of the process is the community,”
Mulvaney said. “People here have the perception, right or wrong, that
no matter what year they bought their property, things shouldn’t
change.
“Well, life goes on. Change is inevitable. The only way to
preserve something is to take a picture.”
The city has restrictions on height restrictions, setbacks and
allowable lot coverage, which Mulvaney said should be respected.
“If people comply with the code requirements, they should pass,”
said Mulvaney. “Instead, they go in with the design for their dream
house and get blown out of the water because a neighbor 280 feet away
(property owners within 300 feet of a project are noticed) who drives
by three or four times objects. It isn’t fair. The city should just
enforce the rules.”
However, the city adds neighborhood compatibility and view equity
to the mix, which stirs conflict. The “mansionization” ordinance
mandates that builders or remodelers must confer with neighbors about
projects, but does not, cannot, require agreement.
Mulvaney has volunteered to serve on the Three Arch Bay
architectural review committee, but has never been selected.
“I think it’s because I am open to change,” he said.
Mulvaney doesn’t’ just build custom homes. For the past six years,
he has designed and built playhouses for Home/Aid, the charity arm of
the Building Industry Association. Proceeds from the sale of the
playhouses benefit Home/Aid programs.
“We have won first prize just about every year,” Mulvaney said.
The playhouses are displayed each year at Fashion Island, which
also hosts Mulvaney’s Santa’s House during the winter holidays.
Mulvaney said the award-winning playhouses are inspired by the kid
inside. With the Sunset project, the builder inside is getting
recognition too. What an idea.
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