Definitive rules would make appeals rare
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Tom Ahern
The Design Review Task Force should develop a comprehensive set of
building rules that everyone -- homeowners, neighbors, architects and
builders -- can agree to beforehand and which are not subject to
appeal.
As I was talking to City Council candidate Jane Egly a few weeks
ago, a prominent Laguna architect came by. I asked him how much more
architect fees were for the identical structure in Laguna versus
neighboring cities.
“I would charge at least 25% higher in Laguna than in say, Newport
Beach. With many appeals, the fees can be a lot higher still.”
When asked why, he replied that the design rules in Newport were
well thought out and detailed, and that if the rules said 15 feet, an
architect could design to that height without fear that plans would
have to be redone. The rules are so well developed that there is no
normal appeals process.
As in so many other areas of Laguna government (conditional-use
permits and the Downtown Specific Plan, to name but two), the design
guidelines are vague and subject to interpretation, so the architect
of a Laguna structure must often redesign after initial plans met
existing guidelines, but when the neighbors objected. Often, several
iterations of major plans changes are involved, and often the
property owners abandon the projects for financial reasons or because
they don’t want to live next to the people who fought them so hard at
design review.
The challenge for the Design Review Task Force is to develop clear
and objective rules for structures, neighborhood by neighborhood, so
that everybody understands that these are the rules and there is
little cause for appeal. It will not be easy, but the battles over
mansionization, heights and views should be fought once, in the
development of the rules, not in their interpretation in dozens of
Design Review Committee battles pitting neighbors against neighbors
while raising the cost of building in Laguna. Of course, there will
have to be careful wording so that neighborhoods do not have
homogenized structures that all look the same.
The other issue for building in Laguna Beach that causes so much
extra cost is the city staff, which should be helping residents,
architects and builders to meet standards with a helpful, “can-do”
attitude, but the opposite attitude is unfortunately the norm at 505
Forest Ave.
It will not be simple for the Design Review Task Force to develop
rules that are no longer vague and to which Lagunans can agree to
abide without the constant use of appeals, but I think and hope it
can be done. The alternative is the rancor, chaos and needless
expense of the current design review process.
* TOM AHERN is the owner of Latitude 33 Bookshop in Laguna Beach.
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