Builders play around with small plans
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Alicia Robinson
A little neighborhood with houses painted bright green and purple, a
hodgepodge of building materials and a building shaped like a shoe
sprang up practically overnight at Fashion Island.
It’s not a lapse in city zoning codes. It’s the return of Project
Playhouse, an annual fundraiser for HomeAid Orange County, the
community outreach arm of the Building Industry Assn. of Southern
California, a trade organization that includes architects and
builders.
For Project Playhouse, builders, architects, landscapers and
designers donate time and materials to create elaborate and eclectic
children’s playhouses that will be displayed at Fashion Island until
Oct. 23 and then auctioned off. The proceeds are used by HomeAid
Orange County to build and renovate shelters for temporarily homeless
people and families.
The playhouses for this year’s event were brought to Fashion
Island Wednesday night, and workers were putting the finishing
touches on the landscaping and the houses on Thursday. And for the
first time, the Orange County Sheriff’s Department also built and
donated a playhouse.
“The inside of these houses and the detail that goes into them is
incredible,” said Mike Meyers, a landscaper with Newport Beach-based
Lifescapes International.
Some playhouses have running water, electricity and entertainment
systems inside, but the outside is important, too. Meyers landscaped
a house built by Pardee Homes of Irvine with the theme of the Mad
Hatter’s Tea Party Cottage.
He chose plants in a variety of colors and used multicolor pots in
keeping with the off-kilter look of the house, which had a tea pot
spout coming out of one side and bright paintings on some of the
walls.
“These are always so whimsical; we’re using stuff we wouldn’t
normally use every day,” Meyers said. “Really it’s like theater
design.”
The houses do look like the products of imaginations run wild. One
had a wooden mill wheel on the side that’s turned by a stream of
water. Another was a giant pineapple like the cartoon character
SpongeBob SquarePants inhabits.
Irvine architecture firm KTGY Group Inc. designed a house fit for
a 21st-century child. While its boot-shaped exterior recalls nursery
rhymes, inside it features a flat-screen television and a video-game
system.
This is the firm’s fourth year participating in the event, which
is in its 13th year. The architects started work on the house in
April, and the builder completed it about a month ago, said William
Ramsey of KTGY Group.
“I think it was just a fun, playful idea, and it was both fun and
challenging to do,” he said.
The fun is one of the reasons the firms enjoy the project, but
they also like that it benefits the community, said Claudia Jones of
Pardee Homes.
“It gives us the ability to be creative, and it’s for a tremendous
cause,” she said.
The curious and eye-catching designs of the playhouses tend to
draw people to them. According to Fashion Island’s statistics, during
the 10 weeks the houses were on display in 2003 they were seen by 3.3
million people, HomeAid Orange County spokeswoman Delene Garbo said.
This is the group’s biggest fundraiser each year. In 2003 the
event raised $370,000, and playhouses usually fetch between $7,000
and $75,000, Garbo said.
The playhouses are fun for the builders, and observers get a kick
out of them too.
“We love it,” said Kim Harker of Chino Hills. She and her husband,
Bob, stopped by Fashion Island on the way to spend time on their
boat.
“The designs are all different and they’re unique,” agreed Bob
Harker. “For playhouses, they’re fantastic.”
An open house, when families can go inside the 12 playhouses, is
planned for Saturday, and the playhouses will be on display until
Oct. 23, when the auction is held. For more information on Project
Playhouse, call (949)533-9510 or visit
https://www.projectplayhouse.org.
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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