Deirdre NewmanClaudia Lipari started bowling at Kona...
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Deirdre Newman
Claudia Lipari started bowling at Kona Lanes when she was 7. Within
the last year, she had been bringing her son to the Tiki-themed
bowling alley that has been a Costa Mesa landmark since the 1950s.
On Wednesday, instead of trying to knock pins down, Lipari was
helping tear the place down.
The bowling alley closed its doors for good Sunday and has been
selling off mementos such as pins and balls ever since. Next week at
the alley, owner Jack Mann will take offers for the larger pieces of
equipment.
“[My son] bowled his first game here,” Lipari said. “My first
[game] was here, too, so at least I got to do that with him. It’s
sad. I don’t want this place to go.”
While Kona Lanes evoked a groundswell of nostalgia in the
community during the past few months as C.J. Segerstrom & Sons tried
to replace it with a Kohl’s department store, it did not translate
into financial support for the ailing alley, former manager Juanita
Johnson said.
“With all the publicity, people assumed we were closed,” Johnson
said. “It took a downhill dive. Every day we opened our door, we went
deeper into debt.”
Sunday’s closure took many people by surprise, especially devoted
Kona fans who wanted to get in one last round.
“It’s like a best friend you could always depend on, and then, out
of the blue, you see that life changes and times change,” said
resident Jon Peek, 39, who said Kona was part of his family history.
In early April, Mann announced that Kona Lanes would close at the
end of June because of the dismal financial state it was in. The
alley had survived the last few years only because of rent
concessions from the Segerstroms, Mann said.
Mann expressed a deep sense of regret at the closure of an
institution that meant so much to so many.
“It’s disappointing because of the fun that people have had
there,” Mann said. “Literally millions of games have been bowled
there. It kind of feels like a tangible thing. When I’m there at
night, you can almost grab it.”
On Wednesday, fans converged on the alley in the morning and
trickled in for the rest of the afternoon to score a piece of bowling
history.
One of those was Robert Calvert, 36, of Huntington Beach, who took
bowling classes at Kona when he was a student at Orange Coast
College. Calvert, who bought two pins at five dollars a pop, lamented
the loss of such of a fun part of Costa Mesa’s history.
“Future youth are not even going to know what it’s about,” Calvert
said. “It should be a time capsule. Ruby’s [restaurant] is trying to
recreate this, but this is the real thing.”
Jeanetta Horne came from Santa Ana with her daughter to get some
bowling balls for her grandson. Horne said she used to bowl at Kona
and will miss a place that offered affordable family fun.
“I hate to see it go,” Horne said. “This is one of the cheapest
recreation [options] for the family you can find.”
Not all the coveted items were inside the alley, though.
Brooke James was as excited as if she had just bowled a strike
when she spotted old and tattered furniture from Kona being thrown in
a dumpster in the parking lot.
James rushed over and offered to buy a good chunk of it for her
vintage clothing store across the street.
“Look at these -- aren’t they cool?” James cooed, pointing to
dilapidated chairs with fabric peeking out from tears in the
upholstery. “I’ll re-cover it with cool fabric and stuff.”
Her husband, David, who grew up in Costa Mesa and owns a record
store across the street, is holding out hope of snagging the “Kona
Lanes” sign.
“I spent a lot of time here as a kid,” David said. “I want
something to remember it by. ... I’m flat broke, but I will bid my
loyalty and time in Costa Mesa so some greedy developer or EBay
doesn’t get it.”
Mann said he has been flooded with offers for various items and
will probably keep some of the goods that have sentimental value to
him, such as the clock that has overlooked lane 20 for almost as long
as the alley has been open.
“If I had a large enough house, I’d take the bar with me,” Mann
said. “It’s the original brass standing bar that’s been in there
forever.”
* DEIRDRE NEWMAN covers Costa Mesa and may be reached at (949)
574-4221 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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