Hotel Yorba

Hotel Yorba, also known as Casa de Martin or Casa Martin, and Steve's Manor, is the nickname given to the private residency of furry artist Steve Martin.

Etymology
The name derives from the street it resides on ("Yorba",) located in Santa Ana, California, USA, and the Hotel-like "open door policy" the residence seems to offer to furry members friendly to its host.

History
The residence, which includes one master room, three tenant ones, one computer lab, and a separated art studio building, has been a hub of furry history, gatherings, and residence since 1982.

Tenants and visitors
The house has had a long list of non-furry, furry or furry-connected tenants, from furries such as Steve Corbett, Paul Dale, Kipper and Chythar, among others, to furry-connected tenants such as Doug Winger, Bob Guthrie, etc. Doug Winger would live here from 1998 until his death in 2015.

Visitors who have frequented Hotel Yorba for mostly furry reasons include furry artists Max Blackrabbit, TRUMP, Vicky Wyman, Lisa Sample, Brian Reynolds, Dustmeat, Xianjaguar, Shawn Keller, Monika Livingstone, Dave Kuhn, Roz Gibson, Mike Kazaleh,  Dan Haskett, Fred Patten, Kjartan "Karno" Arnórsson, Lou Scarborough, Joe Rosales, Noah Miller, Marc Schirmeister, Garrett Ho, Ken Fletcher, Taral Wayne, Trigger Happy Squirrel, Drake Dragon, and other furry/non-furry pros, fans and acquaintances.

Parties, events and furry services
Hotel Yorba has hosted in the past pre and deaddog parties for such local conventions as ConFurence and Califur, collation gatherings for Rowrbrazzle, and furry Halloween get-togethers, etc. Some of these events continue to date.

Some Califur attendees friends of the host have used the proximity of the house to the convention's hotel as a meeting point to and from, alternative lodging area, dead dog party facility, or just as a quick rest stop area. Confurence users took advantage of the same helping services until the convention's move to Burbank, California, and its eventual demise/closure.

From the late 1980s, the same amenities were enjoyed by Comic-Con International's furry con-goers, eventually tapering off by the mid-2000s, especially due to CritterConDiego's cessation of operations in 2003, and the economically strained years of 2004 to 2008. As of early 2021, local Californian visitors are more common due to the availability of vaccines for COVID-19.