A home along the 1900 block of Galaxy Drive is demolished in Newport Beach, CA, on Thursday, March 16, 2023. The Dover Shores house was red-tagged after its back patio, along with some of the bluff it overlooked, collapsed and slid down the hill near the Back Bay on March 3. It was red tagged by officials and the homeowner pulled a demolition permit with the city. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
A cliffside home in Newport Beach’s Dover Shores neighborhood was torn down Thursday, March 16, two weeks after being red-tagged when the land it was built on became unstable, causing its patio to slide down the hillside over Back Bay.
In just a few hours Thursday afternoon, work crews had at least half the home demolished, Councilmember Erik Weigand said. “I was right there, and it was heartbreaking.
A home along the 1900 block of Galaxy Drive is demolished in Newport Beach, CA, on Thursday, March 16, 2023. The Dover Shores house was red-tagged after its back patio, along with some of the bluff it overlooked, collapsed and slid down the hill near the Back Bay on March 3. It was red tagged by officials and the homeowner pulled a demolition permit with the city. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
A home along the 1900 block of Galaxy Drive is demolished in Newport Beach, CA, on Thursday, March 16, 2023. The Dover Shores house was red-tagged after its back patio, along with some of the bluff it overlooked, collapsed and slid down the hill near the Back Bay on March 3. It was red tagged by officials and the homeowner pulled a demolition permit with the city. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
A home along the 1900 block of Galaxy Drive is demolished in Newport Beach, CA, on Thursday, March 16, 2023. The Dover Shores house was red-tagged after its back patio, along with some of the bluff it overlooked, collapsed and slid down the hill near the Back Bay on March 3. It was red tagged by officials and the homeowner pulled a demolition permit with the city. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
A home along the 1900 block of Galaxy Drive is demolished in Newport Beach, CA, on Thursday, March 16, 2023. The Dover Shores house was red-tagged after its back patio, along with some of the bluff it overlooked, collapsed and slid down the hill near the Back Bay on March 3. It was red tagged by officials and the homeowner pulled a demolition permit with the city. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
A home along the 1900 block of Galaxy Drive is demolished in Newport Beach, CA, on Thursday, March 16, 2023. The Dover Shores house was red-tagged after its back patio, along with some of the bluff it overlooked, collapsed and slid down the hill near the Back Bay on March 3. It was red tagged by officials and the homeowner pulled a demolition permit with the city. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
A home along the 1900 block of Galaxy Drive is demolished in Newport Beach, CA, on Thursday, March 16, 2023. The Dover Shores house was red-tagged after its back patio, along with some of the bluff it overlooked, collapsed and slid down the hill near the Back Bay on March 3. It was red tagged by officials and the homeowner pulled a demolition permit with the city. (Photo by Jeff Gritchen, Orange County Register/SCNG)
“It was 11 a.m., and they started with the garage,” he said. “Their personal stuff was still in the house. Thirty years of memories, and it was gone in a second.”
By early afternoon, just a few walls were still standing, and by 4 p.m., the home on Galaxy Drive was gone from the cliff with a panoramic view of the Back Back and the Pacific Ocean.
The 1960s-era home was
red-tagged by city officials
, after its back patio and surrounding vegetation dropped off and crashed down the hillside on March 3. City-hired geologists and public works officials determined the hillside was unstable. The residences to either side were yellow-tagged.
City officials and private geologists hired by the home’s owners continued to monitor the soil and observed further movement. The homeowners asked the city for a demolition permit, which was issued immediately, said John Pope, spokesman for the city of Newport Beach.
The homes on either side of the demolished house have also been given expedited permits so they can begin efforts to stabilize their properties, Weigand said. One of the homeowners hired a contractor who did work on the Getty Villa in Pacific Palisades and is having holes drilled to place more caissons under the property, he said.
In the meantime, city crews have been making sure more water from recent storms doesn’t aggravate the situation for nearby homeowners. A city storm drain between the now-demolished home and one of the yellow-tagged neighbors was damaged in the slide, Weigand said.
Following that, and before the recent two storms, crews installed temporary pumps to divert water away from the homes and down to Back Bay.
“Everybody is on edge and worried because we don’t have answers of what caused it,” said Ursula Braeger, a nearby resident who watched with sadness Thursday as her longtime neighbors lost their home.
“We don’t know if it’s water that soaked into the ground,” she said. Living on a slope, “we’ve always been concerned and we did what we could to add plants and tarp the hillside.”
Erika Ritchie is an award-winning staff writer for the Orange County Register and 10 other Southern California News Group newspapers. She covers military and national defense from West Coast bases to the Pentagon. She's reported from Navy ships, Osprey aircraft and training ranges throughout Southern California, explaining national and international warfare tactics and military equipment. Erika has a comprehensive understanding of issues affecting South Orange County communities, including coastal access and the environment, the plight of marine mammal entanglements, water quality, development, local harbors and quality of life in Newport Beach, Laguna Beach, Dana Point, and San Clemente. While adept at reporting hard news, she's known for telling human stories of conflict, struggle and joy. She's a three-time award winner from the Marine Corps Heritage Foundation for telling stories of Marines in local communities. The Gerald R. Ford Foundation has awarded her coverage of National Defense. She's won many first-place awards from the Los Angeles and Orange County press clubs. Away from her pen, Erika runs, skis and enjoys all things ocean and outdoors. She grew up bilingual in German and conversational in French.