Marine studies center gets $1-million boost
June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- Though a marine studies center at Shellmaker Island
is $1 million closer to becoming a reality, the feasibility of building
the state-of-the-art facility remains in question.
The City Council on Tuesday accepted $1 million from the U.S.
Department of Fish and Game to help build the center for joint use by the
department, the city, the county, UC Irvine and other agencies.
As planned, the site will house water-quality testing, educational
facilities that include an artificial tide pool and a new crew center for
the university -- all sheltered in a center so state of the art that the
structure itself helps preserve the quality of local waters. The project
also includes restoration of the Shellmaker nature trail and wetlands.
But the delicate environment the center seeks to preserve could
instead spell doom for the project. Because Shellmaker Island is
basically a pile of dredged-up material, it’s unclear if the ground is
solid enough to build the one-story building there.
“We just don’t know yet what the site is capable of holding in the way
of a structure,” said City Atty. Bob Burnham, who said that a
geotechnical survey or other studies will ultimately provide the answers.
For this and other reasons, Burnham said, it is difficult to project
how much the center will cost. Official estimates that have ranged from
$4.5 million to $7 million are rough estimates at best, he said.
About $3 million to $3.5 million is now available for the project,
much of it from the American Trader oil spill settlement.
City officials and environmentalists have praised the proposed center
as a cutting-edge solution to local water-quality challenges. County
officials have already moved water-quality testing to temporary trailers
at the site in anticipation of a permanent laboratory there. The
Department of Fish and Game plans to manage the Upper Newport Bay
Ecological Reserve from the center.
The $1 million the city accepted Tuesday will go mainly toward
creating detailed plans for the center.
“This is the chance to get the design phase to a point where the
community, especially Dover Shores, can see the plans and determine
whether they have any concerns about the center,” Assistant City Manager
Dave Kiff said.
Current plans are for a site with a permeated parking lot to control
runoff, a design that would drain rain water off the roof into plants, as
well as nonobtrusive solar panels for power, Kiff said.
He added that additional funding for the project could come from state
Proposition 40 funds. Proposition 40, which passed on May 5, provides
state funds for parks.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.