Activists assail, others hail new Dunes plan
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Jenifer Ragland
NEWPORT BEACH -- The Newport Dunes’ revised proposal for a resort hotel
that debuted at Thursday’s Planning Commission meeting has, not
surprisingly, received mixed reactions.
While commissioners seemed impressed with the proponents’ effort to
address some of the project’s critical issues, one opponent compared it
to a bad experience at a used car lot.
“It’s like asking an insane amount of money for a car so the lowered
price seems reasonable,” said Bob Caustin, a local environmentalist and
Dover Shores resident. “They’re playing a game as though this is some
kind of Turkish bazaar, and instead of taking what they’re entitled to,
they’re trying to see if they can run something past the people.”
The revised plan, which came after commissioners requested several
changes, reduces the total number of available rooms, including
time-shares, from 600 to 470; conference space from 55,000 to 46,000
square feet; and daily traffic trips from 4,800 to 3,630.
The commission had asked Dunes proponents to consider relocating the
project to the other side of the lagoon and changing the entrance from
Bayside Drive to Back Bay Drive.
Sharon Wood, assistant city manager, said commissioners eventually
dropped both ideas. The east side of the lagoon is more environmentally
sensitive and would require the project’s height to increase, Wood said.
And she said moving the entrance would eliminate 100 recreational vehicle
parking spaces.
“It appears they really went through their project to see where they
could cut so it wasn’t such a massive building,” said Ed Selich, chair of
the commission. “I thought they made a very responsible effort to go back
and address changes we requested of them.”
To help give the community a better idea of the project’s size, project
developer Evans Hotels agreed to put up balloon displays marking its
expected height and width.
Rather than the standard approach of using poles or wooden sticks to
simulate height, commissioners thought the balloons would be more visible
and more meaningful for people.
“And for this big of a project, the poles would have to be engineered,”
Wood said.
She said the balloon displays should be up for several days prior to the
commission’s March 9 meeting, when the board will again discuss the
project.
Key sticking points in the debate continue to be the increased traffic
the proposed hotel will generate and how the new project compares with
one already approved for the site.
That project, developed in the 1980s, calls for a 275-room family inn
with 5,000 square feet of retail and office space and 15,000 square feet
of free-standing restaurant space, which would generate 4,000 new vehicle
trips each day.
Robert Gleason, chief financial officer and general counsel for Evans
Hotels, said the figure for the new hotel is lower because restaurants
generate more traffic than conference space. Only 2,400 of the original
4,000 trips were hotel room-generated, he said.
But critics of the project say the traffic study and the project’s
environmental report lack common sense and are very difficult to digest.
Caustin said the Dunes should give up on the new proposal and stick with
the old motel plan that was devised in the late 1980s and early 1990s,
which he believes would be more attractive to vacationing families.
But Tim Quinn, project manager, continues to argue that the updated plan
is far superior.
“A two-star motel may have been great 20 years ago, but I don’t think
that’s the type of project the city wants to have today,” Quinn said.
“The city deserves to have a four-star destination hotel.”
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