Laguna Beach council creates new subcommittee to address Coast Inn plans
Plans to redevelop Laguna Beachâs Coast Inn are going back to the drawing board.
Following a marathon City Council meeting lasting more than seven hours, the council unanimously agreed not to jettison plans for reviving the historic Coast Highway property altogether, but to keep hashing them out in a smaller setting.
And by smaller setting, they meant Councilmen Bob Whalen and Rob Zur Schmiede, who will man a two-person subcommittee that tackles the Coast Inn project specifically in a to-be-decided public setting.
The vote to create the working group came after the council received a pile of letters and more than 60 people, mostly Laguna Beach residents and business owners, spoke about Coast Inn owners Marcella and Chris Dorninâs plan to add a rooftop deck and bar, new restaurants and retail spaces for the hotel and adjacent liquor store at 1401-1391 S. Coast Hwy. The couple also plans to restore a nearby cottage along Mountain Drive thatâs currently being used as a retail space.
The project, which has been in the works for more than two years, failed to win the support of the Planning Commission, which in October unanimously voted not to recommend it to the council.
While many praised the Dorninsâ $25-million vision for their property â which dates to 1927 and once housed the Boom Boom Room nightclub â others were critical that it didnât adequately address its parking needs and potential noise impacts.
Both sides were largely in agreement, however, that the property was far beyond its prime and was in a neglected section of town that, as one man put it, âhas been in a coma for so long.â
Attorney Larry Nokes, representing the Dornins, said the inn âbecame borderline blighted. The dream was to revitalize the property and make it vibrant again.â
Chris Tebbutt of the Laguna Beach LGBT Heritage & Culture Committee said local business are âscaredâ about the state of things.
âI invite you to interrupt that and approve this project as designed,â he said.
Tim Carlyle, an attorney representing neighbors along nearby Gaviota Drive, noted how the Dorninsâ vision was inconsistent with the cityâs zoning and general plan and required variances, including for parking.
He called the proposal for a roughly 6,500-square-foot rooftop bar â one of the main sources of contention on the project â a âprofoundly non-historicâ addition.
Other critics called the plans out-of-scale overdevelopment more about generating money from new bars and restaurants than reviving the historic hotel.
Councilwoman Toni Iseman echoed those concerns.
âWe are really placing the burden on the residents of Laguna Beach,â she said, calling the project, as proposed, a âvacuum cleaner thatâs gonna suck up every parking place on the block.â
Councilman Steve Dicterow advised that both sides arenât that far apart on the project because everyone wants to see new life there.
âWe need give and take,â he added, noting how a two-person council subcommittee can achieve that with the publicâs help.
Zur Schmiede said there is a future project for the Coast Inn, just not the one the Dornins have presented.
âThe details havenât been sweated through,â he said.
Twitter: @BradleyZint
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