Divided Costa Mesa council uproots plans for the Plant commercial-residential project
Plans for the Plant, a commercial-residential development proposed for Costa Mesaâs Sobeca district, withered in front of a divided City Council this week, derailed by parking concerns that have dogged the project throughout the review process.
Though council members tried several times Tuesday night to hammer out language that would move the project forward, they couldnât find a solution that a majority of them supported. After a lengthy and at-times testy debate, they voted 3-2 to reverse a March decision by the Planning Commission and reject the proposal.
Council members Katrina Foley and John Stephens dissented, with Foley calling the decision âembarrassingâ and the Plant âone of the best projects that weâve had come before us in the city.â
The Plant plan called for redeveloping roughly 2.2 acres at the corner of Baker Street and Century Place by renovating three commercial buildings with retail and dining surrounding a central courtyard and adding new greenhouse and food stall structures as well as a four-story building with a blend of 48 residential units, 14 live/work units and office space above a two-level parking garage.
The project was a brainchild of Costa Mesa-based Lab Holding LLC and would have been the companyâs latest venture in the cityâs 39-acre Sobeca district. Other Lab Holding projects in the area include the Camp and the Lab commercial centers on Bristol Street.
Lab Holding founder Shaheen Sadeghi said Thursday that he was âvery, very disappointedâ in the councilâs decision and said it ârobbed the local communityâ of ânot only a wonderful place to live, but a great amenity.â
Though council members were largely complimentary of the project as a whole, they were unable to move past the primary sticking point: parking.
The plan technically met Costa Mesaâs parking standards â providing 243 spaces while city codes require 241 â but Mayor Sandy Genis and Councilman Jim Righeimer questioned whether that calculation fully reflected the need.
They pointed out that several portions of the project, such as certain common areas and some restrooms, werenât included in the cityâs parking tabulation. That has been the practice for some other projects, including the Triangle and the OC Mix at South Coast Collection, according to a city staff report.
If all the excluded areas were taken into account, the Plantâs parking demand could be as many as 63 spaces higher, the report added.
Righeimer said he felt Lab Holding should put down a financial deposit as a condition of approving the project. The money â likely in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, based on figures the council discussed Tuesday â could go toward a parking structure serving the wider Sobeca area or be refunded if it were later determined there wasnât a parking shortfall.
âIâll make it very clear,â Righeimer said âIf there is not [an] actual dollar deposit put up front in some deal, I will vote no on this project and be done with it.â
Genis agreed, saying her âbiggest concern is if you donât get your money up front, you donât get it at all without going to court, more often than not.â
Foley and Stephens, however, objected to requiring such a hefty financial commitment, particularly since the cityâs calculations donât reflect a parking crunch for the project and there are no concrete plans to build a parking structure in the Sobeca area.
âTo take one of our business owners whoâs contributed to the community for 40 years and ask him to take half a million dollars in capital out of his business and put it at risk ... I really think thatâs a lot to ask under the circumstances,â Stephens said.
He and Foley suggested requiring Lab Holding to participate in future Sobeca parking-related efforts should a deficiency be determined down the road.
âIâm not familiar with any situation in the last 14 years where something like this has been done,â Foley said. âI donât think that itâs a good policy or practice for us to change the rules at the City Council meeting and ⌠in a way that has such a significant economic impact on the applicant.â
âI find this process to have been extremely time-consuming, a waste of resources for both city staff and the applicant and itâs just bad governance,â she added. âItâs embarrassing. We should be embarrassed by this meeting.â
Righeimer countered that he thinks it will âgo down as a pivotal day ⌠where the city actually stood up and said weâre not going to allow projects that come in that are underparked.â
While parking dominated Tuesdayâs discussion, it wasnât the only problematic issue for some council members. Mayor Pro Tem Allan Mansoor said he thought the projectâs residential density was too high for the area.
âAt the end of the day, it needs to be less dense and it needs to be better parked,â he said. âIâve expressed my concerns and Iâm sticking to them.â
Sadeghi said heâs still contemplating the future of the Plant but added that his firm will âcontinue to fight to build what we believe people are going to want in the future.â
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