Downtown gets ready for the Strand
Jenny Marder
The revamp of the first several blocks of Downtown is on its way to
becoming a reality, now that all tenants have been evacuated, all
lawsuits settled and parking expanded to accommodate the drastic
swell in shoppers that city officials expect the project will draw.
On Oct. 31, Papa Joe’s Pizza moved from its spot Downtown,
officially leaving the remaining building on the Strand project site
empty of tenants.
Next week, workers will begin drilling to re-abandon the five oil
wells on site. The next phase, the installation of water, sewer and
storm drain pipes could begin as soon as late December. Construction
is expected to start during the first quarter of 2004, said David
Biggs, the city’s director of economic development.
The CIM Group Inc. secured city approval to build the
225,000-square-foot development Downtown Oct. 21, 2002. The project,
which will be bordered by Main Street, Walnut Avenue, Pacific Coast
Highway and 6th Street, will include a 149-room Residence Inn hotel
and several high-end shops.
“This will add quite a bit of additional retail to the Downtown
core,” Biggs said. “It should be an exciting addition. ... It will
work well to complement what we have on Main Street.”
Shops will include Pacific Sunwear, Ben and Jerry’s, Johnny
Rockets, a new sushi restaurant and a coffee shop called It’s a
Grind, Project Manager David Martin said.
CIM officials have also been in talks with stores such as
Abercrombie and Fitch and Ann Taylor Loft.
“The idea is to offer some better shopping options,” Martin said.
“It seems like now, people might go out of the area to Newport or
South Coast Plaza for some of their shopping. The idea is to provide
retail options in the Downtown area so that people can stay in
Huntington Beach and not have to leave the city.”
The project will include a subterranean parking lot with at least
500 parking spaces, 100 more than originally proposed.
“We’ve enlarged the garage to accommodate more spaces,” said Jeff
Mindes, another project manager. “We are provided more spaces than
the demand will require.”
The two lawsuits filed earlier this year by the project’s chief
opponent, a group called Citizens for Redevelopment Excess, have been
settled.
The group’s main complaint was that the project would clog already
crowded Downtown parking.
James Lane, a spokesman for the group, is still skeptical that 500
spaces will be enough to accommodate traffic, yet called it a huge
improvement over 400 spaces.
“I wish that this kind of compromise or agreement had occurred
earlier so that property owners did not have to sue the city over
lack of parking,” Lane said.
Mindes predicted construction will take about 16 months. He is hoping to see the project open in spring 2006.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.