Newport Coast resort will fit area perfectly
Up and down the Orange County coast, luxury resorts are popping up
like diamonds in a (well-groomed) rough. Huntington Beach has the
Hilton. Laguna Beach has the Montage. Monarch Beach and Dana Point
have the St. Regis and Ritz Carlton. Newport Beach just got the new
Balboa Bay Club and Resort.
Now Newport Coast is set to join the party.
Within the next few years, if all goes according to plan, the
Irvine Co. will build a resort at Pelican Hill, a luxury stop with
204 guest rooms in 40 bungalows, 52 vacation homes, 68
shared-ownership villas, a spa and a new golf club house.
There will be challenges, of course. Although the project is not
affected by the city’s growth-control Greenlight law, residents are
certain -- and right -- to raise concerns about possible traffic and
environmental problems. And the Irvine Co. will be wise to ensure
that the construction is sensitive to the surrounding area, which
includes Crystal Cove State Park, and that the process is open to
review.
Why? Because if company officials do so, this looks to be a
project that fits this area perfectly.
Newport-Mesa, with its world-class beaches, its shopping -- from
South Coast Plaza to Fashion Island -- and its fine dining, is the
perfect spot for a high-class resort. With such a climate, it is
amazing that until this month, with the Bay Club’s reopening, there
was no top-notch resort in the area. (The Four Seasons, while
luxurious, doesn’t have the full-run amenities of a resort.)
The benefits go beyond the perks for visitors, of course. The
resort will pump money into the city’s budget, and those visitors are
certain to spend money while they are here, adding to the area’s
tourist-based economy.
It is a project that just makes sense. And one that will make
dollars, too.
It should be one that residents of the Newport-Mesa area support.
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