St. Andrew’s proposal for all
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As a member of St. Andrew’s Building Committee and a 19-year resident
of Newport Beach, I want to share some additional insight based on
our goals for the St. Andrew’s proposal, our meetings with the
neighborhood and specific details as analyzed by the city of Newport
Beach’s environmental report. We are concerned by the debate in the
neighborhood and hope that our continued meetings with our neighbors
will help address their concerns, while still allowing our proposal
for a youth and family center to move forward.
The No. 1 goal for this program is to create a youth and family
center, where the children of this community will have a safe and
positive place to congregate, especially during the most dangerous
after-school hours between 3 and 6 p.m. The center is needed to meet
the current needs of our youth program and will add a multi-purpose
area, meeting rooms, computer facilities and classrooms. In addition,
youth activities that currently occur outdoors will be relegated to
the sound-attenuated, multi-purpose area and will significantly
reduce the current and future noise concerns in the neighborhood.
The other elements of our plan include increasing parking
availability to encourage our guests to avoid parking on neighborhood
streets and to offset minimal parking requirements generated by the
new youth and family center. We are moving the current youth and
family area into the new facility and converting the old area into
additional meeting and conference rooms. We are proposing to add some
storage space and new, to code, restroom capacity.
To provide these amenities, we propose to construct only one new
building and tear down and rebuild two other buildings. The youth and
family center will be the only new structure and will have a
multi-purpose room/gymnasium on the ground floor and meeting space
and classrooms underground. We plan to reconstruct the existing
education building and Fellowship Hall to include additional
classrooms, storage in the basement and conference and meeting space
on the second floors. We then propose to construct subterranean
parking at the existing parking site, creating an additional 150
full-size spaces and 400 overall.
Out of all the new construction, it is important to note that more
than half of the additional density will be underground. In fact,
more than 20,000 square feet of the proposed additional 36,000 square
feet will not be seen by the neighborhood. Of the total, more than
16,000 square feet will be storage, halls and restrooms.
In an effort to clarify the impact to the surrounding community, I
would like to present several findings according to the city of
Newport Beach’s environmental report:
“It is important to note that although the floor area will
increase by approximately 36,000 square feet, the function and use of
the church will not change.” (4.1-6)
“The site is currently zoned R-1 and R-2, which permits
institutional uses such as churches.... approval of a zone change
will make the zoning and land use designation entirely consistent.”
(4.1-9)
“This statistical area is designated predominantly for residential
development; however, in addition to St. Andrew’s Presbyterian
Church, several public and institutional uses exist within the Cliff
Haven Area, including Newport Harbor High School, Cliff Haven Park,
and Ensign Intermediate School.” (4.1-1)
“ ... several potential impacts were identified; however, in those
instances, specific mitigation measures have been included to reduce
the potential significant adverse effects to a less than significant
level.” (1-3)
“The increase in traffic generated by the proposed increase in
floor area will not result in any significant cumulative impacts.”
(4.1-6)
St. Andrew’s is willing, as the report was presented, to accept
all the mitigation suggestions. It was never our intention to start a
debate with our neighbors. It is just the opposite. Our No. 1
priority in this proposal is to create a youth and family center for
this community. We decided that while we were considering the project
that we should help alleviate the current parking and traffic
problems in the neighborhood, which are brought on not only by the
church but by the schools as well. We, therefore, proposed an
underground parking facility that will add 150 new parking spaces at
the church, bringing the total availability at the church to 400
parking spaces. We proposed this and the other elements of the plan
in an effort to be good neighbors.
We are deeply saddened by the distress this proposal has caused
the neighborhood. We began meeting with our neighbors more than two
years ago and have been meeting ever since. We are open to
suggestions, and there is nothing in the plans written in stone. We
are currently in negotiations with our neighbors and are hopeful that
we can arrive at a peaceful resolution that will allow the youth of
this community a safe place to congregate while respecting the
concerns of our neighbors.
JAKE EASTON III
Newport Beach
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