CATCHING UP WITH ... Old Newport Boulevard
Amy Spurgeon
Seven years ago, a group of merchants on Old Newport Boulevard felt it
was time the wheel-worn, pothole-ridden stretch of road received some
city-funded improvements. Considered to be one of the oldest roads in the
city, Old Newport Boulevard once connected Newport Beach commuters with
Santa Ana, back in the 1950s.
The old road, chock-full of character, runs parallel to Newport Boulevard
from The Arches Restaurant to 15th Street. And in this part of town,
everybody knows your name.
“You either know each other or ignore each other,” said 30-year business
owner Roger Schwenk.
Nowadays, the buzz up and down the boulevard is that the city of Newport
Beach has neglected this stretch of land for years.
“They are too busy worrying about Balboa Island and Fashion Island,”
Schwenk said. “This is fashion-less island.”
Schwenk said he has been waiting since April for the city to put asphalt
down in front of his antique store.
“I have had women twist their ankles coming into my business,” he said
pointing to the potholes.
And he’s not exaggerating. Crumbling driveways and paint-peeled buildings
are frequent sights along the road.
Assistant City Manager Sharon Wood referred all questions to Newport
Beach’s planning director, Patricia Temple, who could not be reached for
comment.
The goal in the early 1990s was for longtime Old Newport Boulevard
merchants to brainstorm with the city to come up with a plan to improve
the area. The result, adopted five years later by the City Council, was
the Old Newport Boulevard Specific Plan.
The 10-page document sought to enhance the appearance and identity of the
area, encourage redevelopment and establish guidelines and standards for
new development. The plan also called for the improvement of parking
access and visibility in order to “encourage visitor traffic.”
But longtime street merchant Barbara “Corki” Rawlings says the city has
made few strides toward the printed word.
“I think we are the stepchild of the city,” Rawlings said. “We just get
lost and left behind.”
Some improvements of Old Newport Boulevard include the addition of Bolsa
Park and the rezoning of both sides of the street to include commercial
and residential uses.
Types of businesses, as well as their outward appearances, vary up and
down the boulevard.
Visitors can find marine supplies, unique restaurants, beauty salons and
auto repair shops, as well as vintage clothing and antique stores.
Another major property owner on Old Newport Boulevard is onetime Costa
Mesa resident and now Las Vegas fugitive Sid Soffer. Due to building code
violations years ago in Costa Mesa and a subsequent jail sentence, Soffer
skipped town.
Soffer said Tuesday that even though he has not been in the area for more
than four years, he continues to keep up with current Newport-Mesa
events.
Soffer is upset that the city implemented a zoning plan on the boulevard
that incorporates commercial and residential uses.
“I don’t need residents hollering about my bar,” Soffer said. “Residents
and commercial businesses should be separate.”
Despite feelings of abandonment, many shop owners are hopeful things on
the street will improve in the future.
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