Fill out this form to email this article to a friend
Horror store creeps into codes netherworld
By EILEEN SCHULTE
Published February 21, 2007
Largo - On a busy road lined with stores, repair shops and fast food takeout, one eye-catching building promises Halloween all year long. Castel Bantuit, an odd place by any measure, has appeared at 1751 Missouri Ave., catching motorists by surprise as they whiz by. It is a small monument to horror. On the wall over the front door are the words: "It's not what you think." But before Castel Bantuit can open for business, city officials say they've noticed some disturbing things that need to be addressed: proper building permits. * * * The renovation is only partly done, but already Castel Bantuit looks like a strip mall in Transylvania. Guarding the building are two mean-looking 12-foot-tall gargoyles. Two hearses, one said to have carried bodies at Arlington National Cemetery, are parked nearby. A giant, dark gray mural of menacing griffins covers the outside of the 15,000-square-foot, two-story former auto parts store. Inside is a huge room containing stacks of at least 100 old-fashioned, 7-foot-long wooden caskets. They are the traditional "toe pincher" caskets with a window on top, through which a corpse's face could be seen. When the place opens, they'll rent for $100 a day. There are also a few 8-foot-long, 100-pound phony skeletons and other props. "I wanted to give it that creepy feeling," said co-owner Helene Urbin, 58, of Clearwater. Urbin and her boyfriend of four years, Bert Beigel, 80, bought the property and the vacant lot next to it in March for more than $1-million, according to public records. The couple are renovating the building but would not say how much they are investing in the project. They plan to have a gift shop selling candy, gothic T-shirts, jewelry and $450 caskets, plus a haunted house on the first floor. The second floor is to house a stage where magicians will perform for audiences and The Rocky Horror Picture Show will be shown. Written on the outside of the building is this sentiment: "Dedicated to Bert Beigel." "He got me this building because he wanted me to (fulfill) my dream," Urbin said. * * * Helene Urbin met Bert Beigel when she and his daughter were serving time in a North Florida prison in the 1990s, Urbin said. Urbin, who lived in the Jacksonville area for years, served time for trafficking cocaine and later for intimidating a witness. She was released in 1998. Urbin said she began dating Beigel after his wife, Liane, died in 2002. She said Beigel is a Holocaust victim who survived Auschwitz. A greenish number is tattooed on his arm. The former real estate broker has Alzheimer's disease, Urbin said. He said he knows about Urbin's background. "Helene is a friend of mine and a friend of my daughter," Beigel said. "I've known her for a long time. She's quite changed. She's a great lady now." Urbin said she has been in the Halloween business since the early 1990s and has produced many holiday events. She said she also ran "a terror shop" at the Oldsmar Flea Market. She wants a more permanent base in Largo. But city officials might put a stop to that dream. * * * Largo director of community development Michael Staffopoulos was driving back to City Hall from a meeting a couple of weeks ago and did a double-take when he spotted Castel Bantuit. Staffopoulos said he knew "at first pass" that the elaborate mural outside didn't meet the city's sign code. So he asked city staffers to look into the project. They concluded that Urbin and Beigel are indeed in violation of Largo's sign ordinance. A senior inspector issued a stop-work order and notice of violation. Ken Andrews, Largo's assistant building official, said the couple have not pulled any permits and "have not let us inside." Noncompliance could result in fines and a hearing in front of the code enforcement board, he said. Urbin said she plans to have a sprinkler system installed, bring in an electrician to repair the wiring, and pull all proper permits. "We haven't done anything illegal," she said. "We haven't done any construction other than painting, sheetrock, plugged holes (and) pulled out nasty carpeting" from the old auto parts store. Urbin said Castel Bantuit will have an aesthetic all its own. If and when the place is completed, a skeleton with rotted skin hanging from it will greet visitors. Times researcher Caryn Baird contributed to this report. Eileen Schulte can be reached at (727) 445-4153.
[Last modified February 21, 2007, 07:20:26]
Share your thoughts on this story
Comments on this article
|
by LibbyRal
|
02/22/07 12:43 AM
|
|
Too bad this woman wants to fulfill her dream in Largo, a city whose administration is full of fools and contradictions who don't know if they're coming or going.Ask Sonic owners who closed down while waiting for those clowns to let them have a sign
|
|
by John
|
02/21/07 02:19 PM
|
|
Largo codes are notoriously anti-business. This is an extreme example but the city has done all it can to help businesses fail. Count the number of new businesses to the city - few. How many have gone under - many.
|
|