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#Alioto's No. 8
menubot · 2 months
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Only $0.90 for California Burgundy at Alioto's No. 8? Bargain! http://menus.nypl.org/menus/30012
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Attorney for ‘Flintstone House’ Owner Plans to Sue City Over Backyard Brouhaha
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
By now, you’ve probably met the “Flintstone House.” The curvaceous structure in Hillsborough, CA, home is fairly visible from a busy freeway and has become a local landmark.
The distinctive dome home made headlines after it rolled onto the market in 2015 for $4.2 million. The price of the home was reduced, with speculation about whether the place would ever sell growing with each price cut. Finally, in 2017 Florence Fang purchased the one-of-a-kind home for $2.8 million.
Fang, 84 and the matriarch of a former newspaper-publishing family, doesn’t use the home as her primary residence. Instead, the Hillsborough resident opens up the playful space for parties and family gatherings.
Now, the home’s been thrust into the spotlight again due to a controversy over changes to the large backyard, visible from Interstate Highway 280.
Along with other improvements to the grounds, Fang leaned into the “Flintstones” theme after taking ownership. She added giant sculptures of dinosaurs, a woolly mammoth, a giraffe, space aliens, and cartoon characters to the garden.
Her decor choices prompted a lawsuit from the town, alleging that she lacked the proper permits and that the garden decorations “create a highly visible eyesore and are out of keeping with community standards.”
View this post on Instagram
Hillsborough planning officials are suing the owner of the famous #FlintstoneHouse calling it a "highly visible eyesore" and "out of keeping with community standards." The town wants a judge to delare the landscape display a “public nuisance” and order the owner remove it. #YabbaDabbaDo #LinkInBio
A post shared by KTVU Channel 2 News (@ktvu2) on Mar 18, 2019 at 8:44pm PDT
View this post on Instagram
Are you really from the bay area if you've never been to the Flintstone house
A post shared by くばの-せんぱい (@cubanobruv_finalstage) on Jul 8, 2018 at 5:06pm PDT
View this post on Instagram
The owner of the so-called Flintstone House is not backing down against Hillsborough officials who have sued her in an effort to remove the dinosaur decorations and other statues from her yard. The town says that owner Florence Fang redesigned her playful property without proper permits. Fang told reporters that she got the green light to make over the grounds. Read more about the ongoing dispute on KCBSRadio.com Photos by @bobbutler7.
A post shared by KCBS Radio (@kcbsradio) on Apr 12, 2019 at 2:50pm PDT
View this post on Instagram
We all know Hillsborough’s iconic Flintstone House from the outside. But is it just as weird and whimsical on the inside? Oh yes. Step inside for a tour. ~
Tumblr media
: @gabrielleluriephoto ~ More
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pics: @sfchronicle_photos ~ Read more: bit.ly/flintstonehouse ~ #FlintstoneHouse #FlintstonesHouse #Flintstones #Hillsborough #lawsuit #weirdhouses
A post shared by San Francisco Chronicle (@sfchronicle) on Apr 1, 2019 at 8:15pm PDT
Unbowed by local drama, Fang isn’t backing down.
“Basically, the town of Hillsborough wants Mrs. Fang to remove her statues and her objects of art from her garden in her backyard that cannot be seen by any neighbors and [have] never [been] complained about by anyone,” says Angela Alioto, Fang’s attorney.
“We’re going to sue back for treating her differently because of her home and because they’re trying to deny her freedom of speech,” adds Alioto.
It’s hard to believe that the home wasn’t initially designed as a living example of the iconic Hanna-Barbera cartoon. Designed in the 1970s by architect William Nicholson, the home’s shapes were created by spraying shotcrete onto steel rebar and mesh frames over inflated aeronautical balloons. The result was an organic, otherworldly appearance. 
Originally painted off-white, the home had eye-popping hues added about a decade ago. That transformed the look of the exterior, prompting the connection to the TV cartoon family. The loud appearance also sparked controversy at the time. Love it or hate it, the dome home certainly attracts attention. In January 2017, it easily topped the realtor.com® list of most popular homes.
Fang, who came to America from China in 1960, added the garden decor “because it gives her joy,” Alioto says. “It’s her private backyard. It’s part of the Flintstone theme. She loves the Flintstones. To her, they represent America.”
“I believe her ancestry has everything to do with the way they have treated her from the very beginning,” says Alioto. “I just believe they’re treating her differently in every way possible, and we’re going to prove that.” 
The city of Hillsborough calls the charges of discrimination baseless.
“The current legal action is the result of the property’s un-permitted activities. Every Hillsborough resident would be treated the same way,” Assistant City Attorney Mark Hudak said in a statement.
“It’s just a wonderful place. It’s a great place. But the other side of it is, the property rights of telling you what you can and cannot do in the back of your property that nobody can see from the street,” Alioto says. “It’s very scary. It’s more than big brother.“
Watch: Take a Rare Look Inside the Famous ‘Flintstone House’ in California
The post Attorney for ‘Flintstone House’ Owner Plans to Sue City Over Backyard Brouhaha appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®.
from https://www.realtor.com/news/unique-homes/flintstone-house-hillsborough-backyard-controversy/
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davidoespailla · 5 years
Text
Attorney for ‘Flintstone House’ Owner Plans to Sue City Over Backyard Brouhaha
Justin Sullivan/Getty Images
By now, you’ve probably met the “Flintstone House.” The curvaceous structure in Hillsborough, CA, home is fairly visible from a busy freeway and has become a local landmark.
The distinctive dome home made headlines after it rolled onto the market in 2015 for $4.2 million. The price of the home was reduced, with speculation about whether the place would ever sell growing with each price cut. Finally, in 2017 Florence Fang purchased the one-of-a-kind home for $2.8 million.
Fang, 84 and the matriarch of a former newspaper-publishing family, doesn’t use the home as her primary residence. Instead, the Hillsborough resident opens up the playful space for parties and family gatherings.
Now, the home’s been thrust into the spotlight again due to a controversy over changes to the large backyard, visible from Interstate Highway 280.
Along with other improvements to the grounds, Fang leaned into the “Flintstones” theme after taking ownership. She added giant sculptures of dinosaurs, a woolly mammoth, a giraffe, space aliens, and cartoon characters to the garden.
Her decor choices prompted a lawsuit from the town, alleging that she lacked the proper permits and that the garden decorations “create a highly visible eyesore and are out of keeping with community standards.”
View this post on Instagram
Hillsborough planning officials are suing the owner of the famous #FlintstoneHouse calling it a "highly visible eyesore" and "out of keeping with community standards." The town wants a judge to delare the landscape display a “public nuisance” and order the owner remove it. #YabbaDabbaDo #LinkInBio
A post shared by KTVU Channel 2 News (@ktvu2) on Mar 18, 2019 at 8:44pm PDT
View this post on Instagram
Are you really from the bay area if you've never been to the Flintstone house
A post shared by くばの-せんぱい (@cubanobruv_finalstage) on Jul 8, 2018 at 5:06pm PDT
View this post on Instagram
The owner of the so-called Flintstone House is not backing down against Hillsborough officials who have sued her in an effort to remove the dinosaur decorations and other statues from her yard. The town says that owner Florence Fang redesigned her playful property without proper permits. Fang told reporters that she got the green light to make over the grounds. Read more about the ongoing dispute on KCBSRadio.com Photos by @bobbutler7.
A post shared by KCBS Radio (@kcbsradio) on Apr 12, 2019 at 2:50pm PDT
View this post on Instagram
We all know Hillsborough’s iconic Flintstone House from the outside. But is it just as weird and whimsical on the inside? Oh yes. Step inside for a tour. ~
Tumblr media
: @gabrielleluriephoto ~ More
Tumblr media Tumblr media
pics: @sfchronicle_photos ~ Read more: bit.ly/flintstonehouse ~ #FlintstoneHouse #FlintstonesHouse #Flintstones #Hillsborough #lawsuit #weirdhouses
A post shared by San Francisco Chronicle (@sfchronicle) on Apr 1, 2019 at 8:15pm PDT
Unbowed by local drama, Fang isn’t backing down.
“Basically, the town of Hillsborough wants Mrs. Fang to remove her statues and her objects of art from her garden in her backyard that cannot be seen by any neighbors and [have] never [been] complained about by anyone,” says Angela Alioto, Fang’s attorney.
“We’re going to sue back for treating her differently because of her home and because they’re trying to deny her freedom of speech,” adds Alioto.
It’s hard to believe that the home wasn’t initially designed as a living example of the iconic Hanna-Barbera cartoon. Designed in the 1970s by architect William Nicholson, the home’s shapes were created by spraying shotcrete onto steel rebar and mesh frames over inflated aeronautical balloons. The result was an organic, otherworldly appearance.
———
Watch: Take a Rare Look Inside the Famous ‘Flintstone House’ in California
———
Originally painted off-white, the home had eye-popping hues added about a decade ago. That transformed the look of the exterior, prompting the connection to the TV cartoon family. The loud appearance also sparked controversy at the time. Love it or hate it, the dome home certainly attracts attention. In January 2017, it easily topped the realtor.com® list of most popular homes.
Fang, who came to America from China in 1960, added the garden decor “because it gives her joy,” Alioto says. “It’s her private backyard. It’s part of the Flintstone theme. She loves the Flintstones. To her, they represent America.”
“I believe her ancestry has everything to do with the way they have treated her from the very beginning,” says Alioto. “I just believe they’re treating her differently in every way possible, and we’re going to prove that.” 
The city of Hillsborough calls the charges of discrimination baseless.
“The current legal action is the result of the property’s un-permitted activities. Every Hillsborough resident would be treated the same way,” Assistant City Attorney Mark Hudak said in a statement.
“It’s just a wonderful place. It’s a great place. But the other side of it is, the property rights of telling you what you can and cannot do in the back of your property that nobody can see from the street,” Alioto says. “It’s very scary. It’s more than big brother.
The post Attorney for ‘Flintstone House’ Owner Plans to Sue City Over Backyard Brouhaha appeared first on Real Estate News & Insights | realtor.com®.
Attorney for ‘Flintstone House’ Owner Plans to Sue City Over Backyard Brouhaha
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Man lethally shot by a cop after 'outfitted encounter' in Bronzeville: police
Man lethally shot by a cop after 'outfitted encounter' in Bronzeville: police
Chicago police shot and killed a man Wednesday night after what police depicted as an "equipped showdown" on the South Side.
The man has been recognized as Maurice Granton Jr., said Civilian Office of Police Accountability representative Ephraim Eaddy. Granton's family said he is 24 and has two youthful girls.
Around 8:10 p.m., officers leading an opiates examination in the 300 square of East 47th Street in the Bronzeville neighborhood moved toward Granton, who kept running from them, said Chicago police Sgt. Rocco Alioto.
Officers pursued him, and a "furnished showdown" followed, Alioto said.
An officer shot a firearm, hitting Granton, he said. Police did not state where the man was shot, or expound on the conditions encompassing the experience.
He was taken to University of Chicago Medical Center, where he was later articulated dead.
"Since when does running approve some individual getting shot?" said Granton's sister, Joanna Varnado. "I don't comprehend that. You're not being hostile, you're being cautious."
An officer was additionally harmed while bouncing a fence. He may have a broken lower leg, police said.
Police said they recuperated a weapon on scene. Granton's family questioned whether it was his.
"I simply need to comprehend what the genuine story is," Varnado said. "In the event that it was unfortunate behavior, I need equity. My sibling was 24 years of age. He cherished his young ladies. That is all he lived for, was his children."
Presently, Varnado stated, the family is attempting to love and bolster each other while dealing with their misfortune and endeavoring to discover more about Granton's deadly experience with police.
#JustBarStools
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menubot · 8 months
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Welcome to Alioto's No. 8, would you care for the menu? http://menus.nypl.org/menus/30012
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menubot · 2 years
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Steamed Clams Bordelaise, $0.90, Alioto's No. 8 (1948) http://menus.nypl.org/menus/30012
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menubot · 8 months
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In 1948, Tomato Juice(Cold) for only $0.15 at Alioto's No. 8 http://menus.nypl.org/menus/30012
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menubot · 2 years
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Welcome to Alioto's No. 8, may I recommend the Curried Prawns with Rice en Casserole? http://menus.nypl.org/menus/30012
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menubot · 2 years
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Only $0.10 for Soft Drinks at Alioto's No. 8? Bargain! http://menus.nypl.org/menus/30012
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menubot · 2 years
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Welcome to Alioto's No. 8, would you care for the menu? http://menus.nypl.org/menus/30012
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menubot · 2 years
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New York Cut, $2.35, Alioto's No. 8 (1948) http://menus.nypl.org/menus/30012
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menubot · 4 years
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French Fried Shrimps, Tartar Sauce, $1.15, Alioto's No. 8 (1948) http://menus.nypl.org/menus/30012
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menubot · 3 years
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Bacon and eggs, $1.00, Alioto's No. 8 (1948) http://menus.nypl.org/menus/30012
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menubot · 3 years
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In 1948, Coney Island Clam Chowder for only $0.25 at Alioto's No. 8 http://menus.nypl.org/menus/30012
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menubot · 3 years
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Club Steak, Alioto's No. 8 http://menus.nypl.org/menus/30012
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menubot · 3 years
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In 1948, Fresh Cracked Crab for only $0.75 at Alioto's No. 8 http://menus.nypl.org/menus/30012
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