City approves plans for Surfer’s Hall of Fame
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Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- Residents and tourists may soon be able to
measure themselves, or their hands and feet at least, against some the
greatest surfers to ride the ocean waves.
On Tuesday, the Planning Commission unanimously approved plans for a
Surfer’s Hall of Fame in front of Huntington Surf & Sport at 300 Pacific
Coast Highway, featuring the handprints and footprints of accomplished
wave riders.
“I love surfing, and this has been a dream of mine since I was a
child,” said 27-year resident, surfer and Surf & Sport shop owner Aaron
Pai, who proposed the monument. “It means a lot to surfing fans and the
athletes themselves.”
City officials said while Huntington Beach does have a Surfer’s Walk
of Fame along Main Street, across the street near Jack’s Surfboards from
where Pai’s monument will go, the Hall of Fame is a different concept
similar to the impressions at Hollywood’s Mann’s Chinese Theater, where
celebrities are honored.
The surfing tribute includes the removal of a fountain at the south
corner of Main Street and Pacific Coast Highway, making room for 260
spaces of colored concrete to preserve the imprints of accomplished
surfers where the public can view them. A bronze plaque will commemorate
the area, and a central monument will be lit at night.
Anyone opposing the plan has 10 days from Tuesday’s decision to file
an appeal and take the matter to City Council, although officials with
the project don’t expect a fight.
“We feel that the Surfer’s Hall of Fame will reconfirm the city’s
image as Surf City,” said monument architect Bob Thornton, adding that
the hall of fame would be the first-ever for the sport.
City officials said the monument could also increase safety in the
area. Children often climb up the water stairs that make up the plaza’s
six-foot tall fountain, and have fallen to the concrete ground below
Loitering around the fountain would also be diminished, they added.
For the last six years, Pai has collected the concrete impressions of
champion surfers and displayed them as monuments in his shop. A
five-person selection board evaluates candidates and chooses hall of
famers based on their individual accomplishments or contributions to the
sport.
Ceremonies are held to coincide with surfing competitions, with
wetsuit inventor Jack O’Neill and resident Corky Carroll, a five-time
surfing champion, are two of the 37 concrete slabs bearing imprints and
written sayings in the shop’s hall of fame.
Surfing, like any other sport, has a hall of fame, which everyone
should have the opportunity to enjoy, Carroll said.
“I think it’s going to be fun,” added Commissioner Connie Mandic. “It
will be right across from the pier and people are going to be able to
step right into the feet of these surfers.”
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