Cannery Village packs them in
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Alicia Robinson
While they share part of a name, the multimillion-dollar Cannery
Lofts overlooking the Rhine Channel have little in common with John
Steinbeck’s Cannery Row.
The lofts are a focal point of Cannery Village, the section of
Newport Beach where people historically built ships and canned fish,
and area business owners couldn’t be more pleased that it’s becoming
less and less like a literary skid row.
“I think it’s good,” said Laura Cano, who owns the Beach Boutique
on Newport Boulevard. “It helps the business, the more people that we
have.”
A big part of the rejuvenation has come from the Cannery Lofts, a
controversial live/work development some argued was too big and too
uniform to fit the eclectic and historic nature of the area.
Resistance from residents drew out the planning process for the
21-unit project, but the units -- with living space above and
business space below designed for one owner -- sold out rapidly for
more than $1 million each, and all but one are now occupied, Cannery
Lofts developer Kevin Weeda said.
Area business owners say they haven’t seen a notable boost in
commerce from the small crop of new residents, but overall they think
the changes will be good for everyone.
“It’s good to see a good developer work with the city and develop
a plan that’s compatible with the area,” said Orazio Salamone, owner
of the Newport Brewing Company, a restaurant and microbrewery on
Newport Boulevard about a block from the Cannery Lofts. “I don’t see
anything negative about it, and I saw a lot of negative here before.”
The new buildings in the area are a positive improvement because
they sustain the neighborhood’s eclectic nature, said David
Farnsworth, owner of Laventina’s Big Cheese Pizza on Newport
Boulevard.
But in terms of his business, he said: “I don’t think there’s been
any effect at all. It’s just kind of the natural change as the
buildings get run down and the property values soar.”
The mixed-use redevelopment has brought some new businesses other
than the occupants of the live/work spaces. About a block north of
the Cannery Lofts is Shampoo, a salon that David and Stephanie
Gilbert just opened.
“We are the rejuvenation,” David Gilbert said. “We’ve only been
here a month.”
The area is eclectic and has a small-town feel, and that’s what
the Gilberts like about it. Their customers are a mixture of walk-in
and people who know them from other salons where they’ve worked, they
said.
“It seems that people [who live in the area] want to patronize the
local businesses,” Stephanie Gilbert said.
People were initially concerned that the Cannery Lofts would
change the character of the neighborhood, but the Newport Beach City
Council unanimously approved the project. The controversy seems to
have died down as people have grown used to the tall, angular,
modern-looking loft structures.
And they’re likely to get even more used to them, because similar
projects are already in the works, though none on the scale of the
Cannery Lofts. Weeda is building the 29th Street Lofts, a four-unit
project that already has a list of 100 prospective buyers, and real
estate magnate John McMonigle has created a set of three commercial
spaces topped by three live/work lofts set for completion in early
2005.
With freeways getting more crowded and telecommuting becoming a
viable option, Weeda expects the market for live/work developments to
grow.
“This is a pretty good lifestyle choice,” he said. “You could get
rid of a car if you lived here.”
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