Sea base work ready to set sail
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Paul Clinton
More than four years after launching an effort for a new sea base
in Corona del Mar, local Boy Scouts are at last ready to turn over
the first shovel of dirt to build their new digs.
Construction is set to begin today on the new $5.2-million Scout
Sea Base, which is expected to be completed in June, exactly five
years after they had first hoped to build it. The work will kick off
with a 6:30 p.m. ground-breaking ceremony.
The new base, which includes expanded classroom space, a new dock
and a rowing center, hit a few bumps along the road, including
objections from the California Coastal Commission and a long-running
effort to raise funds to pay for the project.
“It’s on its way now,” said Dave Janes, the chairman of the Boy
Scout committee overseeing the project. “We have all the approvals.
We jumped through every hoop and every wicket.”
The new base will expand the scouts’ current operation, doubling
the number of boys now using it. The new building measures 22,060
square feet, compared with the 9,942-square-foot current building. It
will add a significant amount of new classroom space in the new
two-story building.
The base was established in 1937 and last remodeled in 1980.
The L-shaped addition, at 1931 W. Coast Highway, will be used
primarily as a base for local Troop 90, but is expected to bring in a
much broader cross-section of the community.
The new base will also be safer, Janes said. As part of the
design, a drive-through path will be added to allow parents and
visitors to drop off their children. Now, parents must stop at the
West Coast Highway curb, with cars whizzing by on the street as the
children head into the base.
In addition to holding classes on sailing skills for scouts and
sea scouts, and offering merit-badge courses, the base is expected to
be a destination for schoolchildren on field trips. The base will
also serve as the permanent home for the Lynx, the 19th-century
sailing ship built by Newport Beach resident Woodson K. Woods.
Janes said he has been working with Orange County schools to offer
children tours of the Lynx, the replica of a privateer from the War
of 1812, as a lesson in living history.
Other activities will be offered to bring the public to the base’s
doorstep, said Catherine Malm, the base’s director.
“It’s not only an upgrade and benefit for the scouts, but for the
community,” Malm said. “It’s expanding for the community.”
Much of the funding to build the base, Janes said, has been raised
from donors living near it. The scouts are still raising funds; they
have raised about $4 million so far, Janes said.
The base caused some controversy earlier this year, when staff
members of the California Coastal Commission objected to the size of
the new building. In a staff report, analyst Fernie Sy complained
that the base blocked too much of the view of Newport Harbor.
In June, the commission ultimately overrode Sy’s recommendation to
deny the project on a 7 to 1 vote.
“It’s not going to obstruct the [view of the] harbor,” Janes said.
“We’ve been extremely sensitive about not building something that
looks like the Balboa Bay Club.”
* PAUL CLINTON covers the environment and politics. He may be
reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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