http://www.venturacountystar.com/news/2009/oct/19/simi-shuts-familys-hau
nted-house-attraction

 

Simi shuts family's haunted house attraction

 

A popular haunted house in Simi Valley that attracts thousands of
children each Halloween has been shut down because the city deemed it an
unsafe structure.

 

Haunted Halls has been operated by Cindy Fike and her family outside
their Sebring Street home for the past eight years. But what makes it
popular - a covered wooden maze with steel poles, dark and spooky
scenes, and volunteers that startle visitors - is the reason it was
given a 72-hour notice Friday to be taken down.

 

Responding to an anonymous complaint, the city said the
1,200-square-foot "amusement building" didn't have a permit.

 

Although it is a "great idea," said Ted Drager, a building official with
the city, the structure was a fire hazard.

 

Fike's son, Kyle Killips, 37, is the mastermind behind the haunted house
- he started it nine years ago with the help of his father.

 

The scenes - including a mad-scientist lab, a jail cell with anxious
prisoners and an alien getting an autopsy - get better every year,
Killips said.

 

After three weeks of building, the haunted house was almost complete
when the city told him to dismantle it.

 

"It's a real bummer," he said. "We were going to throw everything at it
this year."

 

Since his plans have been thwarted, he hopes to revamp Haunted Halls
into something else, but needs to find out what the city will allow.

 

There will be no maze, and it will only be open Halloween night, to
coincide with a block party the neighbors are hoping to have, with the
city's permission.

 

Since it was on private property - his mother's home - Killips thought
it was a "temporary structure," and not subject to city rules for
buildings. The haunted house was always free and open to the public.

 

Frances Michielson lives across the street, and said the neighborhood
was shocked to hear about it closing.

 

"It's one of the haunted houses that everyone travels to," she said.

 

Two of her children cried when they found out, she said.

 

Michielson started a petition to have a block party on Halloween night.

 

With more than 25 signatures, they hope the application will be approved
by the Simi Valley Police Department. Early plans include families
coming together for a barbecue and renting a bouncy castle for the
children, Michielson said.

 

The haunted house takes about one month to set up, and typically is open
for three nights leading up to Oct. 31.

 

It's a way to connect with neighbors, Killips said. His favorite part is
when he hears children laughing and having a good time.

 

"I end up giggling like a little kid, too," he said.

 

Killips got the inspiration for the maze 10 years ago when he was taking
his 8-year-old daughter trick-or-treating. They walked through a
neighbor's garage that was converted into a haunted house.

 

The next year, the Killipses had their first haunted house, a much more
modest version of what it grew to be. Since its humble beginnings, he
estimates about 20,000 people have walked through the maze.

 

It hit him hard when he got the notice to take it down. "I'm a big tough
guy," he said. "But I was having a rough time with it."

 

Then when he heard the neighbors were coming together to put on a block
party to try to keep some aspect of the haunted house alive, he almost
cried.

 

Drager said it's unusual to have such a sophisticated haunted house. He
said the city would like to work with Killips so that next year, it
would be a permitted structure.

 

Shutting down a haunted house was unfamiliar to code enforcement
officials in other cities.

 

Sue Taylor, Ventura's code enforcement supervisor, said officials have
conducted inspections of haunted houses built in commercial spaces, she
said, but not on residential properties.

 

Mike Hines, a code compliance officer in Thousand Oaks, hadn't heard of
the city shutting down a haunted house.

 

Killips said he has spent between $15,000 and $20,000 over the years
collecting scary, lifelike figures and has added sensors, lights and
pneumatic devices to bring the scenes to life.

 

But he also posted at least 10 fire extinguishers, used lighted exit
signs, and had the expertise of an electrical engineer to construct the
walls that protect it from the wind and weather.

 

His family owns Plastic Depot, a custom acrylic fabrication store in
Burbank that has connections to the film and TV industry. That's how
Killips, a manager, acquired a realistic side of beef to hang in the
haunted butcher shop display.

 

He said he has tried to switch it up every year.

 

In whatever scene he creates, he would like to use two popular figures -
a ghoul the neighborhood children named George, and Chucky the skeleton,
who pops out of a coffin.

 

"We're going to have something good," he said.

 

Greg Williams | SAIC
Service Desk Account Processor | SAIC Service Desk | phone: 877-WWW-SAIC

 

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