Home Ranch finds possible tenant in Emulex
Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- The mystery tenant for the industrial portion of the
Home Ranch project was unveiled Tuesday when officials from Emulex
confirmed they have signed a letter of intent to occupy a piece of the
former lima bean farm.
President and Chief Executive Paul Folino said the company has given
preliminary confirmation to C.J. Segerstrom & Sons to move into the
industrial portion of the project if it is approved in its current form.
Folino said Costa Mesa-based Emulex has outgrown its current digs on
Harbor Boulevard and needs a new corporate headquarters. The Home Ranch
site provides enough space -- 14.5 acres -- for the expanding business
and allows the network computing equipment company to stay in the city.
“We would prefer to stay in Costa Mesa because it creates a minimal
amount of disruption for our employees, most of whom live in the local
area,” Folino said.
The agreement is tentative, Folino said, because the project has yet
to be approved by the City Council and by the company’s board of
directors. If the project gets the go-ahead from council members, Folino
will work on board approval for the project, he said.
Councilman Gary Monahan was pleased to hear Emulex was considering
moving to the Home Ranch site and even happier to hear about the
company’s success. He said he is glad Emulex wants to continue its
success in Costa Mesa and hopes the city can provide the space the firm
needs, be it on the Home Ranch site or elsewhere.
The councilman said the tentative commitment of Emulex -- a company
that makes fiber channel host adapters and hubs -- bodes well for the
Segerstroms and proves the developers are able to bring high-caliber
tenants to the project.
“Not knowing the outcome of the Home Ranch development application, it
is heartening to know that a very qualified tenant has signed on if the
project is approved,” Monahan said.
Proposed changes to the project, such as moving the industrial portion
to the southeast portion of the 93-acre parcel, as was suggested but
later retracted by Councilwoman Linda Dixon, could have changed Emulex’s
decision to be a tenant, Folino said. Dixon said Tuesday the noise
created by the printing presses at the Los Angeles Times convinced her
that putting homes at the site would not be wise.
“The letter of intent is tied to the property next to the Times
building. We would have to revisit our thinking if the ground moves
underneath us,” Folino said.
The plans for the site -- a former lima bean farm bordered by the San
Diego Freeway, Fairview Road, Harbor Boulevard and Sunflower Avenue --
call for a 17-acre Ikea property, 791,050 square feet of office space,
252,648 square feet of industrial space and 192 residential units.
* Lolita Harper covers Costa Mesa. She may be reached at (949)
574-4275 or by e-mail at o7 [email protected] .
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