COSTA MESA CITY COUNCIL PREVIEW
- Share via
California Scenario
The 54-acre South Coast Plaza Town Center would have been granted
approval by now were it not for questions surrounding the California
Scenario garden. Three partners are trying to build the Town Center
project, but one partner is being held up.
In a months-long debate, the City Council has requested that
Commonwealth Partners LLC maintain the sculpture garden, created by Isamu
Noguchi in 1982. The outcome of the debate lies in the duration of the
upkeep.
The council originally requested it be kept up for 25 years, but has
since asked for it to maintained “in perpetuity.” Commonwealth has not
agreed to do that.
WHAT TO EXPECT
The council has been recommended to again continue decisions
pertaining to the Town Center project to a later meeting.
East 17th Street
Continued at the council’s May 7 meeting because the item was
incorrectly labeled as regular business on the agenda rather than as a
public hearing, the council will discuss realigning East 17th Street.
The council has two options. It can vote for Plan B, with its narrower
turn lanes and bus bays -- between 10 and 10 1/2 feet wide -- and option
for a pedestrian-oriented shopping area, or Plan E, which calls for wider
turn lanes and bus bays -- between 11 and 13 feet wide.
WHAT TO EXPECT
The council has received varying recommendations on the matter.
The East 17th Street Ad Hoc Committee, which narrowed down the plans
to two, favored a four-lane street and recommends the council adopt Plan
B because committee members feared Plan E would pave way for the city to
later add two lanes to the street.
Meanwhile, Peter Naghavi, transportation services manager, suggests
the council go with Plan E because he said the street should be widened
to six lanes.
Residential development standards
The council will ponder approving a second reading of the city’s
municipal code relating to residential development standards. At its May
7 meeting, the council voted 3-2 with Mayor Libby Cowan and Councilman
Gary Monahan dissenting, on one portion of the standards that would
require that all home lot sizes be a minimum 4,000 square feet and an
average 4,500 square feet.
The next day, developer Jeff Pratt of El Camino Partners LLC said that
decision would kill his project to replace the rundown El Camino Shopping
Center with 19 to 29 homes. The Planning Commission had recommended the
council adopt standards calling for minimum lot sizes of 3,000 square
feet with average lot sizes of 3,500 square feet.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Councilman Chris Steel, who voted with the majority May 7, said May 8
that he would suggest the council rectify its decision to ensure that the
El Camino housing project can occur. So, the council may hold off on the
second reading of that portion of the standards and instead call for a
new vote on the matter.
Parking prohibition study
The City Council will consider approving a pilot program that would
prohibit parking in the Mesa Del Mar tract on street-sweeping days. Set
up on a six-month trial period, city officials would study the
neighborhood to determine if the program could work citywide.
The city is proposing Mesa Del Mar for the pilot program because it
includes easy freeway access, dead-end streets, apartments, single-family
homes, short and regular driveways -- many of the variables that could
affect street cleaning in the rest of the city, said Peter Naghavi,
transportation service manager.
WHAT TO EXPECT
The city staff recommends the council approve the program. At the end
of the six months, the staff will report its findings to the council.
FYI
*WHAT: Costa Mesa City Council
*WHERE: City Hall, 77 Fair Drive, Costa Mesa
*WHEN: 6:30 p.m. today
*INFORMATION: (714) 754-5245
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.