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Archive for the ‘Arts & Crafts/ Architectural Preservation’ Category

Jobs Files for State Supreme Court Review in Jackling House Case

Saturday, February 24th, 2007
Jackling HouseJackling House circa 1970 (credit: Christopher Lloyd)

Steve Jobs, who wishes to demolish the historic Jackling House in Woodside, CA, has filed papers asking the California State Supreme Court to accept an appeal of a lower court ruling which forbade him from doing so. In my last report on this case, I expressed the hope that Jobs would finally–after losing decisively in two lower court rulings–accept the will of the judiciary and agree to preserve Jackling House. There are several potential owners who’ve stepped forward and are willing to accept the house if it’s moved to another site, which would allow Jobs to build the new home he wants on


the current property. But Jobs persists in his wish to tear down the home which was built by famed California architect, George Washington Smith (who was responsible for the Spanish colonial revival style popular in southern California).

It is the mark of a very stubborn, very rich, and very petulant person–one used to getting his way in everything–to carry on with this case. The papers he has filed basically restate Jobs’ previous arguments which were solidly rejected by both the Superior Court and Court of Appeals (in a unanimous decision). As in the past, Uphold Our Heritage and its attorney, Doug Carstens, will oppose Jobs.

The intrepid Patty Fisher of the San Jose Mercury News wrote a nice human interest story about the House recently:

At the age of 89, Gladys Woodhams’ passion for preservation is still contagious.

Last week she called to tell me how delighted she was that a state appeals court had again foiled Apple CEO Steve Jobs’ plans to tear down his historic house in Woodside.

“I think it’s wonderful,” she said. “Just wonderful.”

After failing to get permission from the court to demolish the 17,000-square-foot mansion he bought in 1984, Jobs will have to find someone to dismantle the house and rebuild it somewhere else. Several people have expressed interest, and Woodhams would like him to hurry up and make a deal…

“If you have something worth moving and you have the money to do it, well, it’s worth the effort,” she said…

The problem with Silicon Valley, she says, is that people have too much money and too little respect for the past.

“Most of the money is in the hands of people who have bad taste,” she said. “And they don’t even know what they are spending it on.”

I can’t speak for the quality of Jobs’ taste, but he clearly has little or no respect for the past–at least the architectural past.

Jackling House Historic Photos and Steve Jobs Taken Down a Peg or Two

Monday, January 22nd, 2007

For the latest update on Steve Jobs’ failure to gain a review by the California Supreme Court in his effort to destroy Jackling House, see this post.

Just after Steve Jobs lost his bid to demolish Jackling House, Christopher Lloyd visited the blog and wrote me a fascinating story about his personal bond to the House. In the early 1970s, a close relative owned the property and invited Christoper and his family to visit. They did and he had an enchanting stay. His father took these images and I reprint them here with Christopher’s kind permission. Should anyone visiting, wish to use these images you must contact him for permission. Clotilde Luce of Uphold Our Heritage, a former resident of the House herself, says these images fill a gap in the historical documentation of the House. So I reprint them here with pleasure.


Most of the previous photos I’ve seen have been in black and white and have not shown many exterior details of the house and its landscaping. What I like about Christoper’s images is that they show wonderful exterior details; and they also show how the House ‘lived’ in its surroundings. For those who know the northern California landscape, these pictures will remind you of the wonderfully lush understory of stately California oaks. The House here looks nothing like a manicured museum like Filoli, another historic home in the area. Jackling House here is lovingly maintained, but it is most of all lived in. It looks like it is being used, but used well. It would make George Washington Smith, its architect proud.


Jackling House front perspective Jackling House driveway
Jackling House door Jackling House outside door
Jackling House outside Jackling House courtyard

Now for something completely different. I love the dripping sarcasm of this column in the San Jose Mercury News by Patty Fisher:

Howard Ellman, Steve Jobs’ attorney, sounded pretty annoyed when I called him last week to ask about the Jackling House.

I wanted to know how Jobs had reacted when a state appeals court ruled Thursday that he couldn’t tear down his 30-bedroom historic mansion in Woodside.

Didn’t I understand how busy Mr. Jobs was? Ellman asked me. Didn’t I read my own newspaper?

Indeed, I understand. What with Macworld, Cisco Systems’ trademark lawsuit over the iPhone and those sticky questions about backdated options, Apple’s iconic chief executive had more pressing things on his mind than some drafty old house.

Not that the house has ever been a pressing issue for Jobs. Since 2000, he has neglected it, hoping it would fall down so he could build a smaller and spiffier house in its place.

Jobs is good at making things smaller and spiffier.

She notes that Gordon Smythe, a local venture capitalist, is very interested in taking on the house and moving it to a suitable local site. But Jobs, alas, hasn’t taken his interest seriously even though it would seem, after his two court losses, to be the only way Mr. Jobs’ Dream House will get built on the Jackling site:

Smythe wants to seal the deal, but Jobs is a tough guy to get a meeting with these days. Considering they live in the same neighborhood, I suggest Smythe stroll by with his baby and knock on Jobs’ door.

Kids grow up so quickly. If Jobs wants to build his own dream house before his kids leave home, he might want to move this project to the top of his to-do list.

After all, one thing we know about a cool gadget like the iPhone (or the Appletalker or CisNO or whatever the lawyers decide to call it) is that it becomes obsolete in a nanosecond. Someone — probably Jobs — will always design something even smaller and spiffier.

A house, on the other hand, can last for generations.

Or not, if Steve Jobs could have his way. Thank God, two California courts have told him he can’t.

UPDATE: Several commenters below have incorrectly claimed that when Jobs bought the House the law under which he is currently forbidden from demolishing it was not in effect. In their view, Jobs bought the building assuming he could do with it as he wished and then the State changed the rules on him thereby punishing him unfairly. This is not the case. Jobs bought the property in 1984 and the California Environmental Quality Act was passed in the 1970s.

Steve Jobs Loses Uanimous Court of Appeals Ruling, Jackling House Saved

Wednesday, January 10th, 2007
Jackling HouseDaniel Jackling House, ‘tear-down’ no more (Woodside History Committee)

Today brings news of a major legal victory for historic preservationists in their effort to preserve the historic Jackling House, currently owned by Steve Jobs. For over a year, Jobs’ has inveigled to circumvent California preservation ordinances which call for significant attempts to preserve historic homes before demolishing them. Jobs proposed demolishing the home to replace it with a newly constructed residence.

First, the Superior Court ruled unequivocally that he had not exhausted such efforts (actually, that he hadn’t even pursued any such remedies). Here’s how UOH’s attorney, Douglas Carstens characterized the victory:

January 2006 Superior Court Judge Marie Weiner decided unequivocally in favor of Uphold our Heritage. Judge Weiner found Mr. Jobs and the Town Council had sought to evade required provisions under the California Environmental Quality Act. Judge Weiner concluded that there was not evidence to support a finding that there were no feasible alternatives to demolishing this historic resource.

After losing the first round, instead of negotiating in good faith with the three serious offers from potential buyers, Jobs chose to appeal to the Court of Appeals.

Today, this Court ruled unanimously that Jobs hadn’t a legal leg to stand on. Again, UOH’s attorney said:

The Court of Appeal upheld the mandate of the California Environmental Quality Act that projects with significant adverse impacts must be denied if there are feasible alternatives.

The San Francisco Chronicle story covering the ruling characterized one portion of the ruling of the three judge court:

The court cited estimates by the town’s Planning Commission staff that the house would cost $4.9 million to rehabilitate and another $4.1 million to add living quarters, office space and a fitness area. Jobs’ estimate was higher, but he failed to provide any information about the cost of building his proposed new home on the site, the court said.

Without that information, “it is not possible to determine whether the cost of renovating the existing historic structure is reasonable or feasible,” Justice Stuart Pollak said.

Although Jobs can’t be forced to restore the mansion, Pollak said, the town can’t allow him to tear down the historic structure as long as preservation remains a realistic alternative.

Reading between the lines, I’m wondering whether Judge Pollak is saying that if Jobs has presented a realistic cost for his new dream house that it would’ve been a multiple (given the enormous sums spent by the high tech Mr. Blandings when they build their dream houses) of the $9-million proposed cost of restoring Jackling House. Thus, the court would’ve been able to say to Jobs that restoring Jackling House is NOT infeasible compared to the cost of building his new dream house. Since Jobs didn’t present this cost to them, they have no way of judging whether $9 million is a reasonable number or not.

I don’t yet have the actual written ruling. But when I do I will quote it here.

A sweet victory. Jackling House is saved. So California justice has thankfully ruled that celebrities and the God awful powerful are subject to the same laws as you or I. Now, let’s hope that the Justice Department will take a page from California justice and not deem a popular high tech CEO above the law regarding his backdating of company stock options.

Mr. Jobs, a piece of unsolicited advice, there are three serious offers on the table. Instead of appealing this all the way to the State Supreme Court, see reason and sit down and talk with the three potential buyers. We’ve had enough of the noblesse oblige approach. Try abiding by the law and making a good faith effort to preserve the House. If you can satisfy the preservationists with a proposal to move Jackling to a satisfactory alternate site, you might still get to building your dream house. But you don’t get to back out of your obligation to preserve a valuable architectural legacy.

Does Everybody Really Love Steve Jobs?

Tuesday, January 9th, 2007

Steve Jobs apparently made a smashing success of his annual Apple presentation at the MacWorld Trade Show this year while introducing the new iPhone and AppleTV products. But as tech media analysts note, he almost had to hit a home run because of the deep scrutiny he is facing from the Justice Department regarding his role in backdating stock options for himself and other senior executives. Many of these same analysts note that while Jobs should lose his job for his involvement (many chief executives have recently lost theirs for precisely the same infractions that he appears guilty of), he likely won’t. Why? Because everybody loves Steve:

…Three recent articles argue that the options issue should — but probably will not — be the real focus [of the Show].

Their general conclusion: Everybody (except, presumably, for all these pundits) loves Steve Jobs, so he is going to get away with whatever part he played in the scandal. The articles suggest that Mr. Jobs’ rock-star status in the industry may have saved him and his company from a serious setback.

I’d like to add another class of people to those who aren’t wild about Steve Jobs, besides the three media pundits who wrote those pieces about the backdating scandal: historical preservationists. This blog has been covering the story of Jobs’ mad dash to demolish his historic home Jackling House in Woodside, CA. His ‘dash’ was dashed by an ad hoc group, Uphold Our Heritage, which organized to save the historic 1923 mansion built for copper baron, Daniel Jackling and designed by distinguished California architect, George Washington Smith (who also designed the historic Spanish Revival gems in Santa Barbara).

John Heileman, writing in New York Magazine, notes Jobs’ iconic status:

Over 30 years, Jobs has carefully, famously honed his image as the archetypal un-businessman. As an aesthete, an idealist, a man for whom money was peripheral. And now he and Apple are relying on that image to shield him from imputations of financial chicanery. The thrust of their message is that we should believe that Jobs is innocent because he is … Steve Jobs.

Does this man sound like an “aesthete and idealist” or a selfish, imperious fool? He publicly argued that Smith’s Jackling House was an eyesore which deserved demolition (keep in mind it was an eyesore because he refused to maintain it for fifteen years). He also argued that he would build a new home of much greater historical significance in its place. As you might imagine, this bit of monomania didn’t go over too well with the preservationists. In fact, it didn’t go over too well with Judge Weiner of the California Superior Court, who slapped Jobs down saying the home WAS historically significant; and that he hadn’t exhausted all (or even any) efforts to preserve the house.

In fact, in the year since Weiner’s ruling was announced three serious offers have come from wealthy individuals wishing to preserve Jackling House. Lucky for Jobs, his refusal to negotiate in good faith with any of them can’t be used as part of the record against him by the Court of Appeals. Jobs has told the bidders he isn’t interested in discussions with them till he sees whether he wins or loses his appeal. Does that sound like a man showing good faith?

So people can brag on Steve Jobs business acumen, his marketing genius and whatever else they wish to. But there is a group who are distinctly not impressed by Steve Jobs. And while we’re talking about whether or not Steve Jobs thumbed his nose at the law by backdating those options; we should also keep in mind that he has thumbed his nose at a California preservation ordinances too. In both cases, what Steve Jobs has told the world is that he’s too big and too important to be constrained by laws that limit mere mortals.

So far, California hasn’t let Jobs get away with this regarding his property. I hope that the federal government will not let him get away with it regarding the options scandal.

For anyone wishing to support Uphold Our Heritage’s legal efforts, please contribute.

Steve Jobs Appeals Jackling House Ruling to Court of Appeals, Refuses Offers to Save House

Sunday, December 31st, 2006

Spanish Revival Architecture
Steve Jobs lost a State Superior Court ruling last year which prevented him from demolishing the historic Jackling House in Woodside, CA. In the interim, the preservationists opposing Jobs have presented to him a serious proposal from Gordon Smythe, a Silicon Valley venture capitalist, that would involve moving the house to a new location and preserving it. Uphold Our Heritage has been generally supportive of Smythe’s proposal. After the group ironed out most of its issues with the potential buyer, Jobs refused to conclude a deal with him.

Jobs prefers appealing the ruling to State Court of Appeals in a desperate hope that what he didn’t win in Superior Court, he might win in a higher court. The hearing was held on December 20th. While no one knows which way the three judges will rule, UOH’s attorney was heartened by the fact that the one justice who asked questions framed them in much the same terms (Superior Court) Judge Weiner did in her original ruling.

Other factors have encouraged those battling to save Jackling House. Preservationists have discovered other offers to Jobs in the past year which he and his representatives never acknowledged to them. In addition, the Town of Woodside commissioned a study of the relocation options for the house and their independent expert found there were many viable options. All of which weakens Jobs’ contention in his claim that there are no ‘feasible’ preservation options for the home. Since none of these offers had been made before the Superior Court decision nor had the Town study been conducted, we believe Jobs’ case has further eroded in the interim.

What I find passing strange is that given the hot water which both he and Apple find themselves in regarding backdating of stock options, you’d think he’d want to negotiate his way out of peripheral matters such as this one in order not to have any legal distractions facing him. But apparently Steve Jobs is one of those Bill Gates-Steve Ballmer types who brook no opposition or compromise when it comes to realizing their perceived personal or business interests. It’s one thing to be so pig-headed when you’re a master of the universe. But after so many other CEOs have been felled by similar backdating imbroglios, Jobs is no longer a king. And if the SEC decides to launch a full investigation, Jobs and Apple will come under a microscope. I can’t imagine that having the Jackling House hanging over his head will be conducive to presenting him before the public as a fully sympathetic individual nor as one fully willing to respect the law as it pertains to him.

The Amazon link above to Spanish Revival Architecture features Jackling House prominently as a sterling example of this vintage architectural style.

Tikun Olam Linked in New York Times Real Estate Blog!

Thursday, March 2nd, 2006

I just had to add that exclamation point at the end of my title even though most of the rest of the world will find this post ho-hum. I’ve been blogging for four years and using the Times as a media source almost every day. I’ve never been linked at the Nytimes.com site, ever. Here’s how Tikun Olam found itself linked there.

Walkthrough blog screenshotTikun Olam in the Times

I helped create a historic preservation group, Uphold Our Heritage, which is fighting to preserve Jackling House. This is the house that Steve Jobs has been fighting for four years to demolish. The group won a major legal battle in California Superior Court with a judge turning down Jobs’ request to demolish the house, which was designed by renowned California architect, George Washington Smith.

I’ve written several posts about the legal battle. Yesterday, a Silicon Valley online gossip rag (yes, there are such things I guess!), Valleywag.com, picked up my story. The only problem is that the editor got the story wrong in one fundamental detail. He wrote:

the town acts like he wants to build a giant Borg cube designed by Jonathan Ive. They say the old house is too historical to tear down.

Actually, the Town of Woodside would love for Jobs to tear down the house and build a “giant Borg cube” on the site. Only Uphold Our Heritage stood between Jackling House and the wrecking ball.

Valleywag.com’s story was in turn picked up by the Times’ real estate blog, Walkthrough. So that’s how I made the Times.

For several years I’ve been complaining that the Times is behind the times (so to speak) technologically. I’ve pointed out how the Nytimes.com site does not integrate common online features into its site. But I have to say that if these new niche blogs that the Times offers can decentralize and democratize the site enough so it can include someone like me who’s previously been ignored–then clearly Marty Nisenholtz and Nytimes.com are doing something right.

California Judge Rules Steve Jobs Can’t Tear Down Historic Jackling House

Tuesday, February 28th, 2006

Jackling HouseDaniel Jackling House, Woodside, CA. (photo: Woodside History Committee)

On January 27th, California Superior Court Judge Marie Weiner rendered a final judgment against Steve Jobs in his bid to demolish the historic Jackling House. Uphold Our Heritage, a group I’ve supported even before its formal inception, led the battle to preserve the home when the Town of Woodside essentially capitulated to Jobs’ demand that the house must go.

Daniel JacklingDaniel Jackling, founder of Utah Copper Company (photo: NN.Railfan.net)

The house was built by Daniel Jackling, a western mining magnate who revolutionized the copper industry at the turn of the century. He built his palace in 1923. I’m certain he was as entrepreneurial in his day as Jobs’ is in ours. It was designed by renowned California architect George Washington Smith (who was responsible for Santa Barbara’s “Spanish hacienda” style). For further background, see my earlier post about the campaign to save Jackling. The Uphold Our Heritage site also contains valuable information about the home’s history and the architect’s legacy.

Bloomberg News published its own story about the case yesterday, Apple’s Jobs Fights Preservationists Who Want to Save His House. Apparently, CNN ran a story which made a bollocks out of the entire case saying that Jobs was fighting with the Town of Woodside which was attempting to prevent him from demolishing the home (it isn’t, but Uphold Our Heritage IS). The reporter accepted at face value Jobs’ contention that the house is a “monstrosity.” I’ve tried to find this story on their website without success. Apparently, they thought better of profiling it online.

Last December, when Weiner filed her preliminary decision I wrote Steve Jobs Loses Fight to Demolish Historic Landmark. Now that the decision is final I’m delighted. Of course, Jobs attorney has publicly stated that his client will appeal the ruling to the State Supreme Court. This will land Jobs in the same spotlight as David Geffen, another celebrity who took land use decisions into his own hands–and lost. In Geffen’s case, he defied the State’s right to permit public access to his beachfront property in order for individuals to get to the Malibu beach. I’m glad that the Supreme Court doesn’t take it lightly when celebrities ride roughshod over State law when it comes to uses of their property.

Here is a portion of Weiner’s decision:

The administrative record reflects a severe lack of evidence supporting…findings that the EIR alternatives are “economically unjustifiable” or economically infeasible [this refers to Jobs' claim that relocating the home was economically unjustified].

…Their [the Town of Woodside's] finding of economic infeasiblity is not supported by substantial evidence, and was arbitrary and capricious. This was an abuse of discretion.

What the Town…approved is the utter antithesis of its existing General Plan. The theme of the General Plan is one of conservation, preservation, and certainly maintenance of existing structures. It is arbitrary and capricious for the Town of Woodside to imply or interpolate the provisions of the General Plan contrary to its express components.

Such findings simply demonstrate the Town Council’s exaggerated efforts to find a means to the end that Jobs seeks.

In regard to the “conditions” placed upon the demolition permit [that Jobs take a year to find someone willing to move the house off-site] , there has been no showing that these conditions are actually enforceable [i.e. if there were a buyer willing to relocate the house, Jobs would be under no obligation to turn the house over to him/her]. Jobs is the sole decision maker in determining whether or not to accept any proposals for relocation.

Woodside made a finding that the EIR alternative to have the house relocated to another site was not feasible, yet it required that efforts be made to see if the house could be relocated to another site to a willing taker. This demonstrates the absurdity of the “findings” of infeasibility made by Woodside.

Accordingly the finding of overriding consideration was not supported by substantial evidence, and the granting of the demolition permit by Woodside to Jobs was an abuse of discretion.

Congratulations to Clotilde Luce and Uphold Our Heritage for waging a brilliant campaign with the help of Chatten-Brown Carstens, a law firm specializing in cases involving the California Environmental Quality Act. This is a huge victory for historic preservation. It should be a lesson for cities (like mine here in Seattle) which have essentially no regulations intended to preserve existing housing stock (and especially historic homes). Preserve it or lose it!

UOH’s defense of Jobs’ appeal will cost at least $35,000. UOH has confidence it has a strong case on appeal. If you admire historic architecture, if you’ve ever visited Santa Barbara and loved it, if you believe in preserving our artistic heritage, and if you just want to make sure Goliath doesn’t get to run roughshod over the Davids of this world, please consider making a contribution to support the legal defense of Jackling House via the group’s Paypal account.

Tax-deductible donations may also be made through:

National Trust for Historic Preservation
Western Office
8 California Street
Suite 400
San Francisco, CA, 94111-4828

Please note “for Jackling House” on the check.

Steve Jobs Failed Fight to Demolish Jackling House, My Scoop That Never Was

Saturday, January 7th, 2006
steve jobs-jackling house post screenshotMy blown shot at a national news scoop

You remember the old saw: what if a tree fell in the forest and nobody heard it? Well, today I’m asking the question: what if you’re a blogger who publishes a national news scoop and nobody knows?

I don’t normally consider myself a blogger who creates hard news stories. But last week, I published a post here which was a scoop: Steve Jobs Loses Fight to Demolish Historic Landmark. On December 28th, a California Superior Court judge turned down Steve Jobs application to tear down the Daniel Jackling House, a historic residence in Woodside, CA. He’d been fighting Uphold Our Heritage (UOH), a historic preservation group established to fight for the home’s survival, for over a year. The group’s founder informed me of the court ruling on December 28th. I first published my post on December 30th. I wrote to a good number of media sites including the San Jose Mercury News, the Los Angeles Times and the Seattle Times (my local paper, where I know the assistant editor for business) querying their interest in my story. My friend was the only one who replied and he declined the story saying he didn’t think it “was up his alley.”

Shortly after I published, UOH’s founder invited Peter Slatin over to dinner. He publishes a real estate blog at Forbes.com. Slatin published the first mainstream media story on Jobs’ court defeat on January 4th. Shortly thereafter, AP picked up the story. I just checked Google News and 100 media outlets now have the story. And guess who finally published: the San Jose Mercury News! That’s the tale of my scoop that never was.

Scores of people are coming to my site as a result of those Google News links, but very indirectly. Google News isn’t referring them to my site. Google Images has crawled my photos of Jackling House. That’s what’s bringing them to me. Google web search isn’t even drawing many visitors. I feel like a blog news prophet without honor in my own country.

There’s a lesson in there somewhere. I’ve learned a few of my own. First, I’ve asked Google News to include my blog as one of their news sources. I hope they’ll respond favorably to my request. Second, I think this shows that many reporters rely on news wires like AP to tell them what’s newsworthy instead of relying on their own judgment and sources. Third, mainstream media continue to look askance at blogs as legitimate news sources. I’m sure MSM does look to blogs for generating some stories. But in the borderline areas that this story was in journalistically, reporters probably weren’t willing to see this as newsworthy until it’d been validated by one of their own, AP.

I think that’s unfortunate. Of course I say that for selfish reasons as no journalist or blogger wishes to see their scoop relegated to the dustbin of news history. But there’s a more serious point here. At least the story I was covering did get picked up. But think of the thousands or even tens of thousands of stories that bloggers may generate which are truly newsworthy, but not in the eyes of mainstream journalists.

Just think about that national scoop I offered my friend at the Seattle Times. I wonder if he’s having any second thoughts.

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