Balboa Inn expansion plans come into view
- Share via
Noaki Schwartz
BALBOA PENINSULA -- A request to expand the Balboa Inn has city planning
commissioners using caution. While the plan might threaten views for some
neighboring residents, it also hints at just the type of revitalization
business owners have been hoping for.
“Certainly any investment in the area is a good indication,” said
commissioner Larry Tucker. “It’s just whether or not that investment is
going to fly with the locals. We’re going to see.”
The proposal calls for a two- and three-story building with 11 new guest
rooms. Rod Harter, manager of the Balboa Inn, also plans to include some
space for retail shops and a partially covered garage with 20 parking
spaces. Because the design exceeds the allowable floor area and building
height, the project requires permission from the commission to move
forward.
The business community has been clamoring for additional visitors, but
some residents near the inn are protesting that the height of the project
would block their views of the ocean and the harbor. The site, south of
Ocean Front, is owned by the inn and currently occupied by a cafe and
bike rental shop.
“It will take away the Dana Point view for people on the second floor of
my condominium,” said resident Diane Williams. “The property values are
going to suffer. I thought I was buying a pretty secure investment.”
Williams added that if commissioners allow this business owner to build
up, others might follow.
But Tucker said the commissioners are still in a fact-finding mode and
“are a long way from making a decision.”
Last week, commissioners instructed Harter to come back with more
complete site plans and drawings to provide a more accurate picture of
the project.
Harter could not be reached for comment Wednesday.
Balboa Peninsula business owners for years have said the area needs to be
revitalized. Many said they have watched for more than a decade as the
once-prosperous community darkened into an area with few residents
strolling the streets at night.
At the end of February, the City Council endorsed the “Village Plan” and
Balboa Pier parking lot improvements -- the first in a series of moves to
revive the community.
The $7.5-million plan is an effort to make the peninsula more
pedestrian-friendly and attract more visitors. Local business owners at
the time were pleased by the news, but said the changes were slow in
coming.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.