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Fairhills Eichler in Orange sells for $1.9 million, a Southern California record

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The red door opens into an open-air atrium. (Photo by Chris Fox, Curb Appeal Visuals)

The u-shaped “glass house” surrounds the atrium. (Photo by Chris Fox, Curb Appeal Visuals)

A view of the family room, which opens to the kitchen. (Photo by Chris Fox, Curb Appeal Visuals)

The dining room opens to the living room. (Photo by Chris Fox, Curb Appeal Visuals)

The living room features a floor-to-ceiling brick fireplace and glass walls. (Photo by Chris Fox, Curb Appeal Visuals)

The kitchen. (Photo by Chris Fox, Curb Appeal Visuals)

Glass walls bring the outdoors in. (Photo by Chris Fox, Curb Appeal Visuals)

This deck is outside of the dining room and kitchen. (Photo by Chris Fox, Curb Appeal Visuals)

The primary bedroom. (Photo by Chris Fox, Curb Appeal Visuals)

The shower in the primary bathroom, which opens to a small bedroom staged here as an office. It can also double as a closet, gym, or nursery. (Photo by Chris Fox, Curb Appeal Visuals)

The small bedroom is staged here as a home office. (Photo by Chris Fox, Curb Appeal Visuals)

The backyard features a heated pool and a raised deck. (Photo by Chris Fox, Curb Appeal Visuals)

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A twin gable, mid-century modern home in Orange, constructed by postwar developer Joseph Eichler in 1964, has sold for $1.85 million.

The price is nearly 10% above its initial $1.685 million ask in March and exceeds the $1.801 million sale of a Fairhaven Eichler in December, setting a new Southern California record for its kind.

At just shy of 2,000 square feet of living space, this five-bedroom, two-bathroom home in the Fairhills neighborhood was renovated and restored to its original glory by its last owner, a graphic designer who bought the house in 2001 for $364,000.

“The house is next level,” said listing agent Kelly Laule of Better Living SoCal, an Eichler specialist also involved in what is now the second-most expensive Eichler home sale in Southern California. “You almost never see a house as pristine as this one, and I’ve been working with these houses now for 20 years.”

It comes with a Mills Act contract, which offers significant property tax savings in exchange for maintaining the historic home.

A red door in the carport area opens into the atrium, surrounded by the u-shaped home’s glass walls and sliders.

Inside, the vaulted living room boasts a floor-to-ceiling brick fireplace and glass walls onto the backyard pool and raised deck. A wood wall separates the dining room from the family room, which opens to the eat-in kitchen.

The seller reproduced the original kitchen cabinets in redwood to mirror the home’s original design.

Other fixes included redoing the floors, replacing damaged portions of the Philippine mahogany walls, and finding and restoring period-era light fixtures and door hardware.

The five front-glass panels in the carport also were replaced.

Eichler built around 11,000 single-family homes in California, beginning in the late 1940s, with the idea of creating affordable houses for the masses. More than 340 homes are in the three Orange tracts of Fairhaven, Fairmeadow and Fairhills.

Of the three neighborhoods, Fairhills is the only one whose powerlines are buried. The underground utility cables preserve the clean, simple lines of the Claude Oakland and Jones & Emmons-designed homes without distraction.

Sandy Lin of Junda Realty represented the buyer.

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