It takes a vision
Mathis Winkler
CORONA DEL MAR -- It’s a project that will require some major surgery,
but Corona del Mar leaders hope it will heal the wounds Newport Beach’s
major traffic artery has cut through the village’s heart.
Right now, Vision 2004 -- a plan to revamp East Coast Highway for
Corona del Mar’s centennial in 2004 -- remains little more than some
artist renderings and countless hours of discussing the project with
residents and business people.
But “if we pull it off,” said Edward Selich -- a Newport Beach
planning commissioner, Corona del Mar resident and Vision 2004
coordinator -- “it’s going to be one of the most exciting things that’s
ever happened in Newport Beach.”
Early next year, the group plans to give a progress report to City
Council members. The city’s elected officials in February unanimously
backed the village’s business improvement district plan to begin talks
with Caltrans officials about relinquishing control over the highway to
the city.
Unlike Mariner’s Mile, the strip of highway on the other side of the
bay, East Coast Highway has functioned as a meeting point for residents
despite its appearance.
And the unsightly thoroughfare, frequented by 40,000 cars daily,
would get a splash of color if the project goes ahead as planned.
Street medians -- most of them empty concrete islands -- would be
filled with plants to create a linear park, Selich said. The gray light
poles and traffic signals would be replaced with others in “forest or
verde green,” and park benches, water fountains and outdoor dining areas
would help foster a pedestrian-oriented village atmosphere.
A plan to pave parking stalls with the same stones as the sidewalks
would help to create the illusion of more space to walk and less space to
drive without actually narrowing the street -- a crucial consideration
along this busy stretch of road.
A proposed village green at the corner of East Coast Highway and
Marguerite Avenue would become a central meeting point for residents.
Selich said he became interested in the idea to lift the village’s
business district out of its bleak reality when the city removed ficus
trees along the highway in the summer of 1999.
Instead of volunteering his expertise to help undo the damage, Selich
found himself as one of the leaders in the effort to bring back the
village to Corona del Mar.
Although Selich said he expected to complete the hand overfrom
Caltrans by midyear next year, with the highway’s one-mile stretch in
Corona del Mar coming under city control in early 2002, the group still
has several hurdles to overcome to get to that point.
First, council members must pass a resolution to take ownership of the
highway, said Gail Smith, a Caltrans spokeswoman. Next comes legislation,
which will require the sponsorship of a state legislator. After all that,
the California Transportation Commission must still sign off on the deal.
Whenever the control over a highway changes hands, Caltrans will
assess the costs to get it to a “state of good repair,” Smith said.
However, while in some cases the new agency will request to take over
the highway when repairs have been completed, Selich said the Vision 2004
group plans to use the funds for its own improvement project instead.
Because the money won’t cover all the costs, Selich said his group was
also looking into other state funds to make up the difference. He added
that a cost estimate did not yet exist.
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