City manager speaks frankly
Barbara Diamond
A complex planned for city property on Third Street probably won’t be
built as proposed because of changes prompted by concerns about the
appearance and the costs.
“The original project was not realistic, and we are talking about
ways to modify it so we can do it,” said City Manager Ken Frank,
guest speaker Monday at the Village Laguna meeting.
Comments on the draft environmental report for the project are
being reviewed and responses prepared. The proposal, plus
alternatives, effects and funding sources will be reviewed by the
City Council in January and will go to the Planning Commission in
January or February.
Certification of the report does not mean an approval of the
project.
The proposed complex would be at the base of the Third Street
Hill, stretching from Mermaid Street to the Laguna Beach County Water
District property. As proposed, the project consists of a two-story,
14,000 square-foot senior center; a single-story, 11,000 square-foot
community center; redevelopment of the Laguna Beach Community Clinic
to increase its size to 12,000 square feet; and public and private
parking garages under all three structures.
Neighbors of the project have concerns.
“The project is just too big for the site,” said Ed Barbieri,
president of the Downtown Neighborhood Assn.
The major concern is the increase in traffic. It will adversely
affect surrounding streets and cannot be mitigated to an
insignificant level, according to the environmental report
A reduction in the size of the project won’t eliminate the problem
if the number of people using the facilities stays the same.
The additional right-hand lane along the front of the project will
get cars off of one side of Third Street, but it won’t alleviate the
problem of left turns, a concern raised by Jan Barbieri. A vehicle
waiting to make a left turn could halt traffic from North Laguna and
Laguna Canyon clear back to the stoplight at Broadway and Forest
Avenue or beyond.
“That’s a legitimate concern, and we haven’t addressed it,” Frank
said.
Traffic problems generated the most questions in the comments
received on the environmental report and must be dealt with, Frank
said.
“Decision-makers must take issues raised in the EIR into
consideration,” he said.
Alternative projects must also be considered, including a
“no-project” option.
Neighbors’ comments included concerns about the inclusion of the
project in the Civic Arts District.
“It’s too institutional,” said Barbara Hoag, a Loma Terrace
property owner.
Frank agreed. The architects took elements from surrounding
buildings downtown, he said. The arches designed for the facade of
the Senior Center reflect the arches at Water District offices down
the street and at City Hall.
“There is a fair amount of stucco and a fair amount of hardscape,”
Frank said “It needs to be softened.”
Project architects will have time to change the design.
“If everything went well and someone dropped a million dollars on
us, there still would be no construction for two years,” Frank said.
The council will hold at least one, and probably two meetings
before the project goes to the Planning Commission for design review.
-- the commission, not the Design Review Board, oversees projects
Downtown. Then the project will come back to the council.
All three members of the council eligible to vote on the project
have indicated support. Councilman Wayne Baglin and Councilwoman
Cheryl Kinsman own property within 500 feet of the project and are
barred by state law from voting on it.
Funding for the project is problematic. The city paid for the lots
to be used for the senior and community centers and appropriated $5
million for the project, some of which has been spent.
“The goal was that the seniors would raise [another] $5 million,
but I don’t know if that is practical,” Frank said. “Right now, there
is a $4 million gap. I think the city will have to contribute to the
senior center, and I think we should.”
Some private donations to Seniors Inc. for the project have been
rescinded.
“I will withdraw my donation if there is no card room,” member Kay
Whitaker said.
Reducing the size of the center is one of the alternatives that
will be presented to the City Council in January.
No matter what, Frank does not expect the project to be supported
by everyone.
“In all my years here, I have never found a project yet that
pleased all the neighbors,” Frank said.
If consensus were the measure, Moulton Meadows, Alta Laguna Park
and affordable housing at 450 Glenneyre St. would never have made it
off the drawing board, he said.
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