Tiki Central / General Tiki
Permit exemption for Tiki/Chickee huts in Florida
Pages: 1 15 replies
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roach33990
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Wed, May 27, 2009 10:50 PM
There have been several recent articles in Florida newspapers regarding Tiki/Chickee huts. Kind of a nice touch since I hear that they use building methods passed down from generation to generation. If you live in Florida, this might be a good thing to know if you are in one of those rule heavy communities. I am not a construction lawyer nor do I play on on TV. Check your local laws. |
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Bohemiann
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Thu, May 28, 2009 5:35 PM
Permits..... Bah. Never use em'... With all the local Govt budget cuts nobody's looking anyway. |
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Trestiki
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Thu, May 28, 2009 5:59 PM
Permit not necessary .... it's a open air structure |
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dewey-surf
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Thu, May 28, 2009 6:48 PM
You probably have more problems if your community is deed restricted. Some of the 'neighborhood watch' just hate it if you're having more fun than they are. |
TF
TIKIMIKE FL
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Fri, May 29, 2009 6:27 PM
The State of Florida building law also states that you can not have electric or plumbing in the hut constructed by the indians(without a permit). So just have a licensed building contractor to make it for you, like me. Tiki Mike 321-626-2434 |
CAA
Chip and Andy
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Sat, May 30, 2009 7:18 AM
Check with your local government as well..... In Hollywood you have to have a permit if it is a permanent structure regardless of who built it. I got around that by redesigning my idea and not attaching it to the ground. Since it could be moved (yeah right!) I didn't have to have a permit. Here it is almost done. (pix from 04) |
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Ojaitimo
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Sat, May 30, 2009 9:02 AM
Is this why there are several thousand tiki bars in Florida? I know about the Mai Kai, how about a look at some of the others. |
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GatorRob
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Mon, Jun 1, 2009 9:36 AM
I thought everyone knew the answer to this already. There are not "several thousand" tiki bars in Florida. There is the Mai-Kai, Hawaiian Inn in Daytona, the (infamous) Waitiki in Orlando and the mostly forgettable Trader Vic's in Destin. That's about it. The thousands of so-called "tiki bars" are just tropical-styled bars with no real connection whatsoever to mid-century tiki. |
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AlohaStation
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Mon, Jun 1, 2009 9:53 AM
Rob you forgot a big one - Polynesian Resort in Disney World!! My original tiki experience in 1974ish. Spent a week there every summer in my youth. Not many people like to include it, but it was part of Uncle Walt's original vision. In Florida if it has a thatch roof it is "advertised" as tiki bar. I even have a place next to my house that bills themselves as having a tiki bar and its just a bar outside (without thatch). Thank goodness I have the Mai Kai!! |
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Ojaitimo
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Mon, Jun 1, 2009 5:44 PM
Found this placed called Florida Tiki Huts. The background music on the site explains all. |
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Mambo
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Mon, Jun 1, 2009 6:06 PM
Chip or Andy, Since your hut is "movable" and not secured, what do you do |
CAA
Chip and Andy
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Mon, Jun 1, 2009 6:17 PM
Move everything else. The thing has to weigh a ton, and I mean literally. If we get a storm big enough to blow that thing into the pool, the hut is going to be the least of my worries. |
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GatorRob
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Mon, Jun 1, 2009 6:35 PM
True, but it also has lots of little kids running around in Mickey ears. Kind of ruins it. |
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TikiMango
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Mon, Jun 1, 2009 6:51 PM
It's been my experience that if a bar is just outside it is referred to as a "tiki bar". If you can spot thatch, a tiki or even something that is Polynesian (and not Caribbean) consider yourself lucky. |
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danielabalasa67
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Fri, Aug 16, 2013 2:27 PM
Hey everyone! |
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creativenative
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Fri, Aug 16, 2013 5:39 PM
Aloha Daniel and Welcome to Tiki Central Now to get back to your specific question after you received this little orientation, in my opinion those “Florida tiki structures” on your link look very sound and well-made and if you have the money go for it. I’m keeping a record of this site also for those looking for this “kind” of tiki. Only thing I suggest (since it looks like they custom carve or order their own custom tiki) is to have them do a little more homework and make the tikis more realistic and not cartoonish with those giant smiles, shows more respect to the host cultures of the Pacific. I am being specific because you, like me, live in the tropics (I live in Hawaii) and we tend to build very open to enjoy the climate and the real tropics around us but this is not classic tiki, this is not escapism or the illusion of tiki, this is the real thing, especially in Hawaii as you can imagine. Although Florida tiki is very simplistic as compared to classic tiki (thatch & a tiki carving), I will say the neat thing about Florida is that with all the other sub-cultures found in that State (Seminole & Miccosukee, Caribbean African and Latin, pirate and the Margaretville culture from the Keys) tiki from the other pond, the Pacific, made its way to the southeast coast even with all the revival cultures there. Warning: don’t mix these cultures. In away, though, it’s cool and you will find whether good or not all kinds of tiki on TC even though it is not classic or the revival (the current modern version). Sorry to put you though all this and I hope you enjoy your new tiki hut just don’t build it - live it while you use it. Buy a couple Aloha shirts, shell leis and tiki mugs, again look around TC and learn more about tiki. Before you known it you’ll want to expand your tiki hut with the ability of enclosing it at times, buy a colored blow-fish lamp or two and put on that Martin Denny CD…(NEVER Jimmy Buffett) now you’re getting it, enjoy! [ Edited by: creativenative 2013-08-16 17:43 ] |
Pages: 1 15 replies