Costa Mesa needs to find ‘harmony and compatibility’
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Chris Kerins
I am writing to voice my support for the Vida family of Sumatra
Place whose plans for a second-story addition were rejected by the
Planning Commission (“Commissioners reject home-addition plan,”
Wednesday). I sense our city is teetering on the edge of a slippery
slope called “Harmony and Compatibility.”
The key issue is that our code asks for subjective criteria:
Harmony and Compatibility. Defining these terms is not the solution,
eliminating them is. Even if one could come to a consensus for the
definition of these terms, what is the context? Harmonious with the
immediate neighbors? Compatible with the street, the neighborhood or
Mesa Verde? Or perhaps a new design should be harmonious with the
ideal Costa Mesa in my mind.
That is my goal as I wind up a renovation of my 1926 Eastside
bungalow. Should I have instead made it harmonious with my 1960s
Ranch-style neighbor? Or perhaps with the drab-style house with chain
link fencing across the way?
Each new addition and building should add positive character to
the neighborhood, not be restricted to the status quo. If good design
is what we as a city want, perhaps a design review committee with
trained designers and architects is the way to go. That way, the
process can be guided rather than guessed at.
Which gets me back to the point of this. The bottom line of giving
subjective terms like “harmonious” and “compatible” to city staff and
officials just gives them license to say, “I don’t like it.” What
homeowner or even architect can guess what is in someone else’s head?
Commissioner Walt Davenport is right on target being concerned
that they are relying on a subjective part of the code, yet he voted
to reject the plan. The commission should instead be rejecting that
line of the code. And, Councilman Gary Monahan, a growing family in a
three-bedroom house cannot afford to test the code in court. The city
must do the right thing instead.
* CHRIS KERINS is a Costa Mesa resident.
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