The 1880s-era adobe building in Barrio Viejo was in bad shape when writer Kathe Lison set out to restore it four years ago. Her friends thought she was out of her mind, but Lison saw potential in the solidly built structure, despite its crumbling brown walls, lack of electricity and minimal plumbing.
βMost people looking at it did the numbers and went, βNo way,β β said Lison, 46. βWe looked at the numbers and said, βWe love it, and weβre going to do it anyway.β β
She laughed. βHow are you going to know in advance that Diane Keaton is going to show up and want to buy your house?β
Turns out thatβs what happened: Lison and husband Chris Cokinos first heard Keaton, 72 β a prolific house-flipper in addition to being an Oscar-winning actress β was looking to buy in downtown Tucson about 18 months before they reached out to her last summer. Keaton came to tour the home in the spring, she said.
The sale closed in early April for $1.5 million, an eye-popping number for the historic neighborhood, according to records filed with the Pima County Recorderβs Office. Keaton paid cash, records show.
On Wednesdayβs episode of βJimmy Kimmel Live!β Keaton mentioned her purchase of the four-bedroom home, telling the showβs host, βTucson is underappreciated.β
On the propertyβs affidavit of property value, Keaton described the use for the property as a βnon-primary or secondary residence.β She told Kimmel she doesnβt plan to live there and hopes to find a buyer.
Lison and Cokinos, who both moved to Tucson from Utah in 2011, bought the 4,572-square-foot building for $330,000 in 2014. The previous owners, the Mesch Clark and Rothschild law firm, had purchased it soon before the housing market crash, Lison said. It had been vacant for nearly a decade when Lison and Cokinos took over.
The couple almost opted not to sell the place, rejecting Keatonβs first offer. Lison said she was torn between her deep love for the structure in which sheβd invested so much, and her complete exhaustion following two years of single-mindedly working to restore it.
βThe whole process was very fraught for us. One day weβd hope it would sell, the next day weβd hope it would fall through,β Lison said. Ultimately, βwe just said (to Keatonβs representative), βThis is what weβre willing to sell it for and if you donβt want to buy it for that, great, see you later.β β
That offer ended up being the sale price of $1.5 million, or about $328 per square foot.
That blows away the average per-square-foot sale price for a Barrio Viejo home more than 2,000 square feet, which is about $244, said Tika Kelley, a realtor with Realty Executives Tucson Elite.
βThereβs something very special happening in terms of downtown real estate. Thereβs a great demand for older houses, and there are so few adobes available,β she said. βObviously Ms. Keaton was able to see the charm and to recognize the historic value. She found a diamond in the rough.β
Downtown Tucson is undergoing a revitalization, which is also bringing increased attention to the issue of gentrification, especially in the historically Mexican-American Barrio Viejo neighborhood. Nearly 80 acres there were leveled 50 years ago to make way for the Tucson Convention Center complex.
Lison said the home was on the verge of being condemned before she restored it. But sheβs aware of the problematic notion of celebrating βAnglos who come in and βsaveβ places in the barrio,β Lison said.
Still, she said, without her investment, the building would likely today be βdisintegrating back to the earth from which it came. β¦ I am so happy to have been able to do what we did with that property.β
Lison referenced the work of Tucson scholar and author Lydia Otero, whose 2010 book βLa Calle: Spatial Conflicts and Urban Renewal in a Southwest Cityβ discusses an urban renewal project in the 1960s which decimated the low-income Tucson neighborhood, with little input from the residents who lived there.
Historically, βthis was the most densely populated area in the city of Tucson,β Otero said in a 2016 C-SPAN interview. βIt was also the area that housed the largest population of people of color,β including African-Americans, Chinese-Americans and Mexican-Americans, she said. βThere (was) a racialized agenda going on in this project. β¦ Itβs almost like the city intentionally deprived this area of services in order to justify its demolition.β
Adobe structures were stigmatized in the 1960s but today, βadobe is cool,β Otero said. βPer square footage, these homes are the most expensive real estate in Tucson, more expensive than places in the Foothills.β
Keaton was βgraciousβ and striking, wearing her glasses and 4-inch heels, when she came to visit the property, Lison said.
βSheβs renowned for her style and her sense of architecture,β Lison said. βThe house is my child. I couldnβt have parted with it to just anyone. β¦ It sort of feels like handing off the baton a bit. Sheβs going to be able to take that house and do even more amazing things with it.β