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Sunday, May 14, 2006 - Page updated at 12:00 AM

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Lamborghini installed in California home

Los Angeles Times

NEWPORT BEACH, Calif. — Some millionaires decorate their mansions with rare paintings. Richard Moriarty bolted a 1974 Lamborghini to the wall of his Newport Beach estate Friday.

Since Home Depot doesn't sell kits to hang cars as artwork, Moriarty hired a 70-ton crane to lower the Italian sports car through a skylight in his living room.

Earlier, the car's engine was removed and transformed into a "200 mph coffee table" for guests who prefer their drinks "shaken not stirred," said Moriarty, an heir to the family that developed an area shopping mall.

Getting the Lamborghini into the house took about an hour. The project was conceived months ago, when architect Fleetwood Joiner began designing Moriarty's new home, $2 million worth of steel and concrete that will overlook Newport's Back Bay.

"This was one of the original ideas for the house," Joiner said. "The skylight was designed to fit the car."

Joiner has installed offbeat elements in previous mansion projects — including indoor rifle ranges, bowling alleys and a 28-foot-high interior waterfall — but the Lamborghini is "one of a kind," he said.

The car will hang over a solid-glass staircase leading to Moriarty's wine cellar. The car also will plug into the home's electrical system so its inside lights can be switched on.

Has gasoline become so expensive that it's cheaper to turn a Lamborghini into a wall sconce than to drive it?

Not quite. Moriarty, 58, is known for his irreverent tastes. In the 1980s, he organized exotic costume parties, such as his "Pimps, Hookers, Drug Dealers and Lawyers Ball," that drew up to 3,000 revelers.

As a teen, he toiled in the lima-bean fields his uncle, Henry Segerstrom, transformed into the thriving shopping mall.

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More recently, he planted a small vineyard on his 3.5-acre estate and began bottling prize-winning wines under such labels as "Wretched Excess" and "The Idle Rich."

The fermented grapes are aged in a 75-foot-long cave locked with a former KGB prison key.

Outside the cave, catfish and koi swim in a lagoon fed by a 200-foot stream built by Moriarty, who owns an orchid nursery and landscaping business. A pirate flag flaps nearby and chickens strut around a coop.

The automotive addition to Moriarty's cache of curiosities seemed logical. "I have a Lamborghini and I've got a big wall," he said.

On Friday, the sleek black Countach — license plate "FAASST" — was hoisted 60 feet in the air by the crane, and a five-man crew maneuvered the 1,000-pound, engineless vehicle through the skylight and hung it from a steel-reinforced wall with loops of steel cable.

"It's a beautiful piece of art," Joiner said.

But Moriarty, in flip-flops, shorts and a T-shirt, wasn't quite satisfied. "I want to stencil some tire marks on the wall," he said. "Seriously."

Copyright © 2006 The Seattle Times Company

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