A Closer Look -- The center of attention
Andrew Glazer
COSTA MESA -- At times it was as tough as pulling in a 190-pound tuna,
another challenge R. Scott Bell relishes.
But like landing a trophy fish, the local developer said the struggle of
buying and renovating the crumbling Harbor Center was worth the reward.
Worth settling a costly lawsuit with unhappy neighbors. Worth the risk of
buying the land bit by bit, with the possibility that one or more than
five landowners might refuse to sell their portion, rendering the rest of
his holdings useless. Worth spending approximately $51 million to make
the center look “modern, even in decades to come.”
Bell, the wide-shouldered and driven president of the Santa Ana-based ICI
Development Co., said he loves a good challenge.
“The project was about persistence and timing and we’re known for being
persistent,” he said.
Many residents who had been concerned about noise and traffic during and
after the renovations to the 320,000-square-foot plaza, are now saying
they’ll shop there.
“I’ve already been shopping at Home Depot,” said Jesse Bequette, whose
home backs into the Home Depot. “And the stores give us additional
security in our yard.”
He was part of Neighbors of the Harbor Center, a grass-roots group that
sued ICI, fighting its plan to renovate the city’s original shopping
center last year.
Bell settled with the group, buying the people living closest to the
center double-paned windows and central air-conditioning. He also built a
masonry wall and a landscaped berm near Home Depot to buffer truck noise.
“Bell was quite reasonable,” Bequette said.
Other neighbors, such as Tamar Goldmann, said they can still hear the
sounds of beeping trucks and boxes being unloaded from their homes.
But now that the center’s three largest tenants -- T.J. Maxx N’ More
clothing store, Albertson’s supermarket and Home Depot home improvement
store -- have opened, Bequette said he had little to complain about,
except traffic on Harbor Boulevard.
At the opening of Albertson’s on Tuesday, hundreds of cars entered and
left the shopping center at rush hour. Still, cars traveling along Harbor
Boulevard flowed freely.
Some City Council members, especially Joe Erickson, were worried that
Home Depot might attract crowds of day laborers like its sister store in
Santa Ana.
But over the two weeks Home Depot has been open, the parking lot has been
free of people soliciting painting, construction and housecleaning jobs
Bell’s wife, Carle, was the project’s architect. Her design could be
easily described as funky industrial, complete with visible steel beams,
bolts and buttresses. Some stores have sloping, half-mooned roofs, others
zigzagging angles. The stores are painted various shades of browns and
beige and have permanent metal awnings held up by steel cables.
“We weren’t sure what we thought about it at first,” said Cheryl Pitzer,
district sales manager of Albertson’s. “But now, well, it’s pretty neat.”
Mayor Gary Monahan said the center, along with Triangle Square, will
bring new economic life to Harbor Boulevard.
He said the center was a “rat hole,” before it was renovated.
“Harbor Center was a rundown nest for transients and undesirables,” he
said. “It was dark, there was no security. There were hidden spots for
people to hole up in and it was a constant problem for the police
department to respond to all of the neighbor’s complaints.”
Bell wasn’t the first developer to notice Harbor Center’s potential.
“It doesn’t take a genius” he said. “There was no major retail in the
area. It was crying out!” Not to mention the center is on Harbor
Boulevard.
The catch was that, in the 1950s, Harbor Center’s original developers
opted to put stores in the center of the lot and surrounding them with
parking. Bell said that design was proven long ago to not work.
But it was impossible for Bell to buy the whole property, raze the old
buildings and start anew. The land was owned by more than five separate
entities, each with a different agenda.
But in 1988, Bell began to buy piece after piece of land. Bell said
Harbor Center wouldn’t exist today if just one property-owner had chosen
to hold onto their piece of land.
“It was a big challenge,” he said. “We had to invest a lot of time and
money.”
Several other developers sniffed around while Bell began his Harbor
Center buyout. But not one plunged in to take the risk.
Monahan credits Bell for being the only developer with the guts and
perseverance to stick it out.
“He was really good at hanging in there and negotiating with a lot of
different interests,” he said. “He’s really tenacious. He kept at it,
pounding at it like a brick wall.”
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