Countdown to 2000: Lifestyles
Alex Coolman
The year was 1971, and the old Newport Fun Zone was in the cross hairs of
the developers. A plan to tear down the structure and build a towering
condominium complex seemed certain to spell the end of old-time Newport
Beach.
“I fought that,” recalled longtime resident Allan Beek. “I went to court
over it. Fortunately, while we were in trial, a case came down that said
you had to have an environmental impact report for private projects as
well as public projects.”
That incarnation of the Fun Zone was saved -- for a while anyway.
“It ran for 10 years,” Beek said. “And for all those 10 years, I could
ride the bump cars for free.”
The ‘70s were a time that saw a lot of battles over the direction the
Newport-Mesa area should be moving. Residents were torn between a desire
to preserve the character of the area and a few more materialistic urges.
“In the late ‘60s and early ‘70s, there was this huge interest in
environment, but a lot of the people down here were making money in real
estate,” said Judy Rosener, a Lido Isle resident who served on the
Coastal Commission from 1973 to 1981.
“What happened at that time was a lot of people in Newport became very
interested in protecting certain things. I don’t think people today
realize what got protected.”
The environmental vibe was very much in the air at the time. The energy
crisis had inventors delivering lectures on solar energy at OCC and a
Costa Mesa Chevron station manager wringing his hands over a proposal to
limit individual gas consumption to 35 gallons per month.
“It’ll kill us!” the manager lamented.
The Orange County Register ran an article to remind its readers of the
possible benefits of the crisis, quoting psychologist Chaytor Mason’s
opinion that “in deprivation, families generally pull together.”
The only exception to this homily, Mason noted, was the families that
“tend to have a lot of fights, even in affluent times.
“In their case,” Mason noted, “the crisis may just tend to make them have
more fights.”
Sources:
The Daily Pilot; “Newport Beach, the First Century: 1888-1988,” by James
P. Felton; Interviews with Allan Beek and Judy Rosener; The Orange County
Register.
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