Costa Mesa delays changes to development codes
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Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- The City Council unanimously agreed Monday to postpone
making a decision on a proposed overhaul of the city’s residential
development codes until at least May.
City officials extended a moratorium on new, two-story, single-family
developments and second-story additions. City staff will use the time for
an extensive public notification campaign that will include sending
mailers to every residential property in the city, running several
newspaper advertisements and holding a public forum on the issue.
“I think we’re not there yet, but I hope in the next six weeks we can
get there,” said Councilman Gary Monahan, who expressed concern two weeks
ago that the city did not do a good job in notifying homeowners about the
upcoming changes. “With my wife and four kids, I need a bigger house and
I can’t afford to buy a new one. The only way I can do it is to build
onto my house. If we cut back second-story additions, families like mine
can’t do it.”
The new standards would affect the design and construction of
two-story homes and second-story additions in all residential zones
throughout the city.
The revisions would require bigger lots, larger driveways, more
off-street parking, more distance between main buildings in multifamily
developments and a more extensive review process for new developments, as
well as for major remodels such as second-story room additions.
The changes also would reduce the maximum allowed building height and
increase the amount of landscaping required. Finally, developers would
have to follow stricter architectural design standards, including having
more variety in building heights and roof forms, more offsets and
building projections in home facades and enhanced detailing.In June, the
council established a temporary moratorium on small-lot multifamily
developments throughout Costa Mesa in an effort to preserve the
Eastside’s neighborhood character. In December, the council extended the
freeze to give the city more time to work on the new building standards.
The council on Jan. 15 also imposed a moratorium on new single-family
houses and remodels.
Most of the several resident who spoke on the issue didn’t favor at
least some aspect of the proposed revisions.
“I feel the notification was totally inadequate,” said resident Bob
Fernandez. “Your average citizen is not going to be able to evaluate
this. There are a lot of impacts, I don’t think people really
understand.”
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