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Exhibit 6 - Response to Appeal Comments <br />Appeal Application No. 2024-01 for Maharajah House Moon Pavilion (2221 N. <br />Heliotrope Drive) <br />began a program of major alterations to the backyard that included a <br />general remodeling of the area and the installation of a handful of buildings <br />and structures of historical and cultural interest imported from Vietnam. <br />Structures relocated from Vietnam to the back yard include a roughly 20- <br />foot-tall wood pavilion with intricately carved details and a tile -clad roof <br />system; a nineteenth-century, traditional residence with an iron wood <br />structural system; and multiple additional smaller structures of a traditional <br />Vietnamese character. The series of changes to the backyard described <br />above, especially the introduction of the imported buildings and structures <br />from Vietnam, have introduced new architectural and landscape elements <br />with no apparent relevance to the original architecture of the property or to <br />its significant historical associations with the Maharajah. As such, in its <br />current condition, the backyard would be highly unlikely to contribute to the <br />significance of the property, and the addition of a new pavilion would not <br />affect the property's continued eligibility as a Santa Ana Landmark or a <br />contributor to the National Register -listed Floral Park Historic District. <br />Proposed changes, which would be confined to the back yard, also would <br />not affect the historical integrity of the Floral Park Historic District as a <br />whole. As proposed, bamboo would be planted near the north property line <br />to obscure the proposed pavilion from view from the public rights -of -way on <br />Santa Clara Avenue and Heliotrope Drive. While the new bamboo would be <br />clearly visible from the rights -of -way, its appearance alongside the existing <br />wall would be consistent with the internal setting of the Floral Park Historic <br />District, which is characterized in part by its variety of landscaping. As stated <br />in the National Register nomination form for the historic district, <br />"Landscaping varies from building to building, but as this is a point of pride <br />within the neighborhood, landscaping is of high caliber. The majority of <br />properties feature shallow lawns, mature shrubs and flower gardens. <br />Perimeter fences, low walls, and hedges are usually present, and some are <br />original to the property." In addition, the pavilion and bamboo would be <br />confined to an area corresponding to a very limited portion of the property's <br />northern frontage, approximately 100 linear feet. Because of the limited <br />physical scale of the changes, the project would be partially visible only from <br />very few public vantage points, further reducing its visual effects to the <br />internal setting of the historic district. <br />d. Appellant Statement — Current Owner's Intent and Actions: In <br />addition, the owners of the Maharaja House have shown a proclivity to <br />VA <br />