Greenlight sees medical use in center
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June Casagrande
Greenlight leaders have taken a public position in favor of a plan
for Hoag Hospital to transform a neighboring, near-vacant office
building into medical offices.
While Hoag officials won’t say whether they hope to acquire the
Newport Technology Center at 500 Superior Ave., City Councilman
Steven Rosansky said that hospital officials have told him they are
interested in purchasing the Newport Technology Center for medical
offices.
“It was my understanding that the hospital was probably looking to
acquire the Newport Technology Center property and there was concern
there might be Greenlight opposition,” said Rosansky, who declined to
name the Hoag officials he spoke with. “I took the initiative to get
in touch with Greenlight to see if they were willing to support that
project and to see if they would write a letter supporting it.”
Hoag officials declined to comment.
The building became the center of controversy recently as the city
has been considering rezoning the building from technology and
research uses to general office use instead.
Greenlight leaders opposed the change because they believe it
circumvented Greenlight law. The building was approved to be built on
the former Hughes Aircraft site on the assumption that technology,
research and development would not bring much more traffic into the
area. For this reason, a Greenlight vote was not required.
Changing the zoning would undermine the reason that a Greenlight
vote wasn’t required in the first place, argued Greenlight spokesman
Phil Arst. He said that general offices would likely generate much
more traffic that the technology-oriented businesses the owner
thought would occupy the site before the dot-com crash changed the
business landscape.
The Daily Pilot has been in negotiations to lease property at the
Newport Technology Center building. If Hoag bought the building, it
would likely mean that the Daily Pilot could not move its offices
there.
Though medical offices generate about three times as much traffic
as regular offices, Arst said the change would benefit the community
in two ways. First, he said, the city is already slated to bring in
more medical offices. Putting some of those offices in the Newport
Technology Center Building won’t bring in any more traffic than would
have come to the city anyway, he said.
Also, Arst added, the city needs medical offices and the vital
services their occupants provide.
“This is a classic example of a beneficial project that actually
causes less overall traffic congestion,” Arst said.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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