A sense of play
- Share via
Young Chang
When night falls onto the Darling House, Tinkerbell flies out of the
chimney.
The coat rack near the door holds the clothes of Peter Pan, Tinkerbell
and Captain Hook, because this is the fantasy-turned-reality version of
the house where Peter Pan lost his shadow and met Wendy Darling. The
fireplace works too.
The roughened-toughened binocular case on the mantel contains browned
maps with routes to Treasure Island and Never Never Land. The little
kitchen is stocked with little pots, little pans, even littler utensils.
Never mind that this is a playhouse -- one in which adults might need
to duck to move around because everything’s proportioned for a small
child. The builders went all out.
Pardee Homes, Bassenian/Lagoni Architects, interior design firm Color
Design Art and landscape architect Lifescapes International, Inc. thought
small but extravagant in their vision for this Peter Pan-inspired home.
Their neighbors -- 10 of them to be exact -- did too. Cluttered at
Fashion Island’s outdoor atrium near Bloomingdales Home Store, the 10th
annual Project Playhouse 2001 fund-raiser for HomeAid Orange County melds
fantasy with reality and water with land.
“It’s a very exciting event because the builders really take it to
heart,” said Delene Garbo, spokeswoman for HomeAid. “They really give it
their all, and when you see the playhouses, you’ll see the incredible
detail that’s in each of the playhouses.”
Established by the Building Industry Assn., HomeAid builds and
renovates shelters for people in Southern California without homes.
The playhouse village opened for tours last week and will remain open
for viewing through Oct. 13. An auction party on the last day will
determine the new owners of these whimsical tiny houses. The playhouses
are donated by the Building Industry Assn., the builders and the design
teams.
Bidding begins at $2,000, but the average price in past years has
proved to be $16,000.
HomeAid’s shelter projects involve such groups as Casa Teresa, House
of Hope, the Anaheim Interfaith Shelter and the Orangewood Children’s
Home.
“Basically we wanted to do a fund-raiser and it made sense to do
something that was related to building because that’s who is our
charity,” Garbo said.
Tom Sawyer’s River House, built by David Mulvaney & Company, Inc. --
along with Richard Kranz and interior design and architect teams -- has a
sink with running water inside. The fireplace lights up, small rocking
chairs clutter the patio outside and folded-up red and green bandannas
curtain the windows.
A Nantucket-style lighthouse called Lighting the Way -- built by KB
Home with KB Home Architecture, SJA Landscape Architects and designer
Klang & Associates, Inc. -- is lawned with sand dunes and sea grass.
“They’re very elaborate and they’re very large,” Garbo said. “Last
year we had a full-screen television, computers and security systems in
some of them.”
The Darling House even has a doghouse outside. And if you want to know
the way to Tiger Lily’s hide-out, there are arrow signs to help.
“If I was a little kid, I would totally love this house,” said
interior designer Julie Schneidewind.
FYI
WHAT: Weekend tours of the Project Playhouse Village
WHEN: 11 a.m. to 5 p.m. on weekends only, through Oct. 13. The auction
party will begin at 5:30 p.m. Oct. 13.
WHERE: Fashion Island, 401 Newport Center Drive, Newport Beach
COST: $5 donation
CALL: (949) 553-9510
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.