Debate could focus on city’s future
Jennifer Kho
MESA DEL MAR -- A plan to replace an aging retail center with homes
goes before the public for the first time today -- but many residents
have already taken sides in what promises to be a lengthy debate about
the direction the city is headed.
The plan would convert the rundown, 2.5-acre El Camino Shopping Center
-- bordered by single-family homes, an office building and apartments --
into single-family houses.
The Planning Commission is scheduled today to consider only a request
to rezone the property from neighborhood commercial to medium-density
residential, which would allow the owners to build between 19 and 29
homes on the site.
The developer, El Camino Partners LLC, has not submitted a specific
plan, and the design will depend on new residential development standards
that the city is working on.
The City Council on Tuesday voted to extend a moratorium on new
two-story, single-family developments and second-story additions in all
residential zones throughout the city while it works on those new codes.
The proposed revisions would require bigger lots, larger driveways,
more off-street parking, more landscaping and a more extensive review
process for new developments and major remodels.
Final designs for the El Camino project will be reviewed by the
Planning Commission and the City Council after the residential
development standards are approved.
But long before that point, neighbors have already taken strong
stances on both sides of the issue.
Store owners, employees and customers are dead set against the
conversion and Tuesday submitted a petition signed by about 200 people
opposed to the project.
“A lot of people really need our services,†said Jessica Ordonez,
manager of Super Star Burgers, which is in the shopping center. “There
are a lot of customers who live in the apartments. We get single guys
living alone who come here to eat, as well as people who aren’t allowed
to cook in the apartment or people who come in late from work and who
just want something quick.
“Plus, we have the school nearby and teachers eat here and kids after
school, especially if they have parents that come home from work later.â€
But Mesa Del Mar Homeowners Assn. Inc. representatives spoke in favor
of the change at a December meeting, when the City Council agreed to
consider the medium-density housing project when it is submitted.
“We just think that, although the shopping center served its purpose
when it was first put in, it’s deteriorated to the point that it has
become a hangout for a bunch of kids and an eyesore,†said Ed Keene, vice
president of the association. “We think replacing it with beautiful
two-story homes will increase the value of the type of city we want Costa
Mesa to be. We think it will be quite an improvement, a step in the right
direction.â€
Planning Commissioner Katie Wilson said the main issue will be for the
commission to decide whether the services provided at the shopping center
are available elsewhere in the area.
“It’s a tough situation because there is so much support for housing
that, I think, stems from the frustration about the state of the center,
but there is also a significant population in the neighborhood that uses
the services,†said Wilson, who added that she has not yet taken a
position on the issue.
“Cleaning up the property is important, but that doesn’t mean we have
to rezone to residential to do it. We need to be sure there is a balance
of services in the area.â€
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