Deal between Jobs and investor would pave way for dream house

1235»

Comments

  • Reply 81 of 96
    itrnitrn Posts: 4member
    Not sure when that pic of the house was taken but someone has kept up the yard
  • Reply 82 of 96
    arlomediaarlomedia Posts: 271member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by tt92618 View Post


    Your bias differs from post to post but virtually universally involves some very negative assumptions regarding motivation, intent, outcome of a sequence of events, etc. Your statements are often polarizing, and frequently they filter out any sort of light, such that only some darkness remains. In short, whatever possible reason may exist for something, you will pick the most negative, darkest, most despicable explanation, and then champion it is fact.



    Oh, man, this perfectly describes most of the users on most of the online forums I participate in. There's something about this format that lets people discard all courtesy and modesty and just rant. It's great to see someone being taken to task about it. Thanks, tt!
  • Reply 83 of 96
    trajectorytrajectory Posts: 647member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by teckstud View Post


    Um?

    You are completely mistaken. I don't hate everything about Apple. And if you averaged out the percentage of iPhone threads throughout the year you would see exactly what I meant. i may even buy an iPhone next week, now that it has all the features I've wanted for the past 2 years and the reviews it been receiving. I cxan deal with the AT&T issue as the "seem" to be in the process of upgrading as well- finally.

    You really should read my posts and not just what the "fanboys' have said about me.

    Just because I don't automatically go bananas for anything and everything "Apple", does not a hater make.



    I have read quite a few of your posts here, and they seem mostly negative. I can understand that you might not like something Apple has done, I don't like everything Apple has made or done either, and have posted some criticisms here, too. But, you seem to be particularly vocal about your displeasure in most things Apple. As this is an Apple fan site, it seems a bit strange that you'd constantly criticize everything they make or do and expect a warm response.



    Anyway, I don't mean to pile on, you have your opinion and I have mine, and we can all get along as long as we remain civil.
  • Reply 84 of 96
    trajectorytrajectory Posts: 647member
    Back to the topic...



    If Jobs owns the property this house is on, he has a right to rip it down and put a new one up if he wants. I think people are making much ado about nothing, it's just a house, eventually it will turn to dust anyway. Let the visionary man build his dream home and live his final years in peace, he deserves it.
  • Reply 85 of 96
    ajitmdajitmd Posts: 365member
    I am surprised Steve Jobs wasted time fighting in courts over something like this. He could have dumped the property and found some nice property just as good in his area and built what he wanted... especially with the money that he has. Life is just too short to waste in Pyrrhic victories.
  • Reply 86 of 96
    zanshinzanshin Posts: 350member
    ten thousand arsonists in California and this PoS is still standing...



    I have a great plan:



    I think the restorationists should be given temporary custody of the home and a year to restore it. They would have to pay all upfront costs for the repairs and restoration, not do it on credit.



    If at the end of the period they haven't done it, Jobs gets to demolish it. If the restoration is complete, he pays 80% of their incurred expenses, and they must buy the house from him for fair market value.



    It's a win-win. Put up or shut up.



    BTW, it's ridiculous that people who won't either invest money or their labor should be telling others what to do with their property.
  • Reply 87 of 96
    patrollpatroll Posts: 77member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by teckstud View Post


    Um?

    ...



    Two Ms short of being auto-insulted by wilco.
  • Reply 88 of 96
    dr millmossdr millmoss Posts: 5,403member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Trajectory View Post


    If Jobs owns the property this house is on, he has a right to rip it down and put a new one up if he wants.



    No truth to this. Wishful thinking perhaps, but not truth.
  • Reply 89 of 96
    thrangthrang Posts: 1,010member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Dr Millmoss View Post


    No truth to this. Wishful thinking perhaps, but not truth.



    May not be the truth in terms of current laws, but these laws are nonsense and are just another example of government interference in private affairs.



    That house could sit there another 100 years and it will have no impact in any aspect of anyone's life. Document the hell out if it, take a million pictures, a 100 hours of video, and make it the subject of a course in architectural school if it's so important and see if it drives or inspires contemporaneous version of it.



    I am sick of government intervention into personal matters. If the states wants to dictate something historic, they should buy it for full market value plus any costs inconvenience to the current property owner for relocation to a similarly value property. Let the state pay for it, which, of course is really the taxpayers, which of course, would quickly be met with outrage. Thus, they instead burden the individual with maintaining something they don't wish to with no recourse or financial.



    Nothing lasts forever, this building has no historical significance other than in the self-serving minds of these preservation groups, and in the grand scheme of the world is meaningless! Property owners have the right to live in a home that serves their needs in a contemporaneous structure, not a museum. Yes, general local ordinances are generally reasonable - footprint of house as a percentage of property, height, setbacks for privacy, etc. If this house blew up tonight, no one would notice or care in year, if not a few weeks, other than a rarified group of radical preservationist who are severely deluded that these are important issues.
  • Reply 90 of 96
    dr millmossdr millmoss Posts: 5,403member
    In the words of the great man, "whatever."
  • Reply 91 of 96
    tt92618tt92618 Posts: 444member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by thrang View Post


    May not be the truth in terms of current laws, but these laws are nonsense and are just another example of government interference in private affairs.



    That house could sit there another 100 years and it will have no impact in any aspect of anyone's life. Document the hell out if it, take a million pictures, a 100 hours of video, and make it the subject of a course in architectural school if it's so important and see if it drives or inspires contemporaneous version of it.



    I am sick of government intervention into personal matters. If the states wants to dictate something historic, they should buy it for full market value plus any costs inconvenience to the current property owner for relocation to a similarly value property. Let the state pay for it, which, of course is really the taxpayers, which of course, would quickly be met with outrage. Thus, they instead burden the individual with maintaining something they don't wish to with no recourse or financial.



    Nothing lasts forever, this building has no historical significance other than in the self-serving minds of these preservation groups, and in the grand scheme of the world is meaningless! Property owners have the right to live in a home that serves their needs in a contemporaneous structure, not a museum. Yes, general local ordinances are generally reasonable - footprint of house as a percentage of property, height, setbacks for privacy, etc. If this house blew up tonight, no one would notice or care in year, if not a few weeks, other than a rarified group of radical preservationist who are severely deluded that these are important issues.



    My sense is that we need to take the good Dr. Millmoss to task for talking about this as if it involves legalities. So far as I can see, this house is not deemed by the state of California to be a historic property. If it were, there would be no question about this issue at all. However, that does not appear to be the case here. Linking long PDF documents that detail the many interesting elements of the house and its history doesn't establish a 'fact' that it is a protected structure, despite all statements to the contrary. I skimmed the PDF in question, and so far as I can tell, it sums up to a recommendation from one evaluator that the house 'should' be eligible for a protected status. Oddly enough, however, despite the fact that the house supposedly 'should' be eligible for a protected status, it does not have one.



    What has happened in this case is that a group of concerned local preservationists have been actively campaigning with the local municipality to deny Mr. Jobs' permits. That is all there is to this. Talking about this like what Jobs wants to do is some sort of legal infraction is just hyperbole. Asserting that the house is factually protected or that it is a recognized historic property is also not true. Rather, this house is a structure which some people think is of historic interest, and because the think this they also believe it should be protected. They have to this end interfered with the permitting process such that the permits required for demolition have been denied by the local city council. That's it - there is nothing more to this story.
  • Reply 92 of 96
    mdriftmeyermdriftmeyer Posts: 7,503member
    If it were a Kirtland Cutter Home I'd imagine he'd have kept it:



    Here is an example of a Villa he would have wanted:



    http://search.tacomapubliclibrary.or...zzy=&maxfiles=







    Kirtland Cutter: http://www.historylink.org/index.cfm...fm&file_id=115



    Too bad architects don't do it like Kirtland did in his day:



    This virtual tour would be something of Steve's financial background could be put to use quite well:



    http://www.glovermansiontour.com/



    He never struck me much for that style and more of the Pasty Clark Mansion style:



    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Pa...k_Mansion1.JPG
  • Reply 93 of 96
    dr millmossdr millmoss Posts: 5,403member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by tt92618 View Post


    My sense is that we need to take the good Dr. Millmoss to task for talking about this as if it involves legalities. So far as I can see, this house is not deemed by the state of California to be a historic property. If it were, there would be no question about this issue at all. However, that does not appear to be the case here. Linking long PDF documents that detail the many interesting elements of the house and its history doesn't establish a 'fact' that it is a protected structure, despite all statements to the contrary. I skimmed the PDF in question, and so far as I can tell, it sums up to a recommendation from one evaluator that the house 'should' be eligible for a protected status. Oddly enough, however, despite the fact that the house supposedly 'should' be eligible for a protected status, it does not have one.



    Completely wrong on every count.



    The report determined that the property is eligible for listing on the California Register of Historical Resources, so in fact it IS considered to be historic by definition under California environmental law. To my knowledge, this fact was never disputed by ANYONE. However it should be understood that this is NOT a form of protection. This eligibility does NOT require that the house never be demolished. What it DOES require is that the property be considered to be an environmental resource for purposes of the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). It does not have to be listed, just found to be eligible.



    The establishment of this fact required the city to prepare an Environmental Impact Report (EIR) which evaluates: (1) the environmental impacts of the proposed project, (2) the feasibility of alternatives to the proposed project, and (3) the adoption of measures to mitigate unavoidable adverse impacts. CEQA requires that environmental impacts be avoided when possible, and environmentally superior alternatives be pursued if they are feasible and meet the project objectives.



    This last question was the issue which was litigated. It often is in controversial CEQA-related issues, as the provisions of the law are fairly vague, and much case law exists from which it is possible to argue a wide range of positions. Here, as if often the case, the court ended up deciding whether the city had done its homework properly.



    Like it or not, this is how it works here in California. My sense is that you shouldn't be taking anyone else "to task" when you don't understand the basic issues, and can't be bothered to do more than skim.
  • Reply 94 of 96
    zoetmbzoetmb Posts: 2,654member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by roehlstation View Post


    The argument about the historic nature is not the argument, (although if you could please provide the name of the professional that did deem it as historic, I'd appreciate that). The argument is about the rights of the property owner. I would love to see the building restored, if not on site then restored elsewhere, but I do not agree at all that Steve Jobs be forced to pay for the relocation. This just flies in the face of the principles that this country was founded on. While, I don't agree with what Steve has done with the house and if it is true he bought a mansion in Memphis like the rumors say, I hope that doesn't fall to the same condition, I don't feel that if someone wants to move the house it should not be up to Mr. Jobs to pay, in most cases seen so far, over half of the cost to do it. To me, if the people are so inclined to save the building, then they need to put their money where their mouth is. There are a number of grants and incentives that can be filed to get the help.



    I completely disagree. Being a property owner does not give you the rights to do anything you want. There are zoning laws and there are those who think that preserving open space and important architecture should sometimes take precedence over the ego and money of landowners.



    "Money talks" will lead us (as it already has in some places) to a society of McMansions and shopping malls in Central Park and places like it. The problem in the United States is that since we are obsessed with money and also that we're a young country, we have no appreciation for either art or history. We have lost an incredible amount of great and important architecture in this country because of that attitude. Compare this with Paris, for example, which has preserved almost of all of its great architecture. Do you really want to live in a country where more and more of it looks like the worst parts of New Jersey?



    If Steve wanted to put up a 23-story apartment building on the site, should he be permitted to do so just because he owns the property? If he moved into an area with numerous old-growth redwoods, should he be permitted to chop them down because he wanted to build a swimming pool in exactly that spot?



    I'm not qualified to know whether this particular house is important architecture or not, but I'm puzzled as to why Jobs, who can live anywhere he wants, bought the place in the first place if he intended to knock it down and knew (since he had to ask permission) that there might be an issue with its destruction.



    I used to live in Park Slope in Brooklyn, an area comprising primarily of Civil War era brownstones and mansions. Part of the area is protected. There are always people who want to knock down a brownstone and build something else. If that's what they wanted, they shouldn't have bought there in the first place.
  • Reply 95 of 96
    mike fixmike fix Posts: 270member
    I'm surprised this place hasn't mysteriously burned down yet.
  • Reply 96 of 96
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by AjitMD View Post


    I am surprised Steve Jobs wasted time fighting in courts over something like this. He could have dumped the property and found some nice property just as good in his area and built what he wanted... especially with the money that he has. Life is just too short to waste in Pyrrhic victories.



    I agree.



    Short of that, I would have demolished the house and built a small Tubmleweed house just to flip the bird at political and historical no-nothings.



    Ref: http://www.tumbleweedhouses.com/
Sign In or Register to comment.