It’s time to move city yard...
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It’s time to move city yard to ACT V
Kudos to the City Council for reviving the plan to remove the city
corporation yard from the Village Entrance site of the Civic Arts
District. It’s about time!
As chairman of the 1996 Corporation Yard Subcommittee of the
Village Entrance Task Force, we conducted a detailed study of the
existing yard and cataloged alternate sites for a new facility.
Our conclusions were definitive and straightforward:
1) The yard must be moved in order to create the opportunity for a
viable, well-designed Village Entrance project.
2) Alternate corporation yard sites that would meet functional
requirements were limited, with the ACT V site having the most
opportunities and the fewest constraints.
3) The city should sell the North Laguna auxiliary nursery site
and allocate the considerable funds that would be generated toward
new yard construction.
These recommendations were at first embraced by the City Council
to the point that preliminary work at ACT V was completed in order to
prepare the site for new yard. About the same time, the Planning
Commission and the council created the Civic Arts District and
authorized a design competition to provide for enhancing the area.
Implicit in the implementation of the Civic Arts District concept was
the corporate yard relocation.
Then, at the 11th hour, for no practical reason that I could
discern, the council retreated from authorizing the next phase of
work, despite having spent large sums of money to reach that
conclusive stage.
Now we have design competition concepts with the corporation yard
albatross unavoidably shoehorned into the Village Entrance site
plans. Ironically, the yard’s retention at the Village Entrance would
create one of the conditions that opponents of its relocation are
apparently concerned about: parking and infrastructure dominating the
area at the expense of civic amenities.
Looking at the big picture, the larger goal of the Village
Entrance project and the Civic Arts District is to improve the entire
Downtown environment as a pedestrian-friendly place that remains
viable and vibrant for local merchants as well.
The removal of the corporation yard is the fundamentally necessary
first step to reach that goal. Its relocation at ACT V will preserve
opportunities for outlying peripheral parking, as well as sufficient
close-in parking that does not overwhelm Downtown character.
I urge the council to stay its new course and move quickly to
relocate the corporation yard. Failing to do so would mean that our
citizens and merchants would continue to suffer the morass of
traffic, constraints to commerce and constrained quality of downtown
community life that we have endured with loud complaint for way too
long.
GREG VAIL
Laguna Beach
Confusing corporation yard photo explained
As lovely as it was to be pictured on the cover of today’s
Coastline Pilot with council member Elizabeth Pearson and architect
Morris Skenderian, your paper failed entirely to identify why we were
there!
So, allow me to take this opportunity to explain: the three of us
were among more than two dozen community members of the 1996 Laguna
Beach Village Entrance Task Force appointed by the City Council to
investigate options for the piece of land next to City Hall and
across the street from the Festival of Arts and Laguna Playhouse
presently referred to as the corporate yard -- the city’s equipment
maintenance and storage facility.
The old sanitation tower shown behind us in the above-mentioned
photograph occupies a portion of the yard and, to the best of my
knowledge, has been unoccupied, unused and in disrepair for many
years. It has also come to symbolize the deteriorating eyesore of
rusting corrugated metal buildings and stacks of material that the
yard has become over the years.
This Village Entrance Task Force unanimously agreed this site must
be beautified and made more functional by creating an inviting
park-like setting and providing expanded parking where it is needed
most.After a year of intense study and animated meetings, the task
force concluded that the majority of yard functions not only could
but should be moved off site.
After much research, it was determined that the only site capable
of housing such functions was the ACT V parking lot. ACT V would
continue to serve overflow parking needs during the summer, and there
would be a significant overall net gain of parking spaces with the
new Village Entrance. This would also enable the city to consider
contracting out some yard functions, with a possible savings in
operating expenses.
With its eyes to the future, the task force also gave a nod to the
past, recommending that the sanitation building should, if at all
possible, be preserved as a historic structure and made functional
within the new Village Entrance. The long-overdue, recently concluded
design competition was extremely beneficial in helping to envision
what this property can become, and since it was always understood
that the designs were conceptual, the newly revived plan to move the
yard to ACT V will in no way render moot these imaginative plans for
the entrance. A communitywide dream that was shelved by the city --
at least twice in the past 20 years following similar planning
processes -- finally has the potential to be realized. That’s why
Elizabeth, Morris and I were on the front page of the Coastline
Pilot, and it’s important to bring that to the attention of your
readers.
RICHARD STEIN
Laguna Beach
Moving yard to ACT V would be mistake
I continue to oppose the moving of the city corporation yard to
ACT V and will maintain this position until being shown that better
uses of the space can’t be made.
The most important thing is the total area is not being used. My
vision is that a parking structure would span the flood control
channel and would start at the hillside behind. The Festivals and
Playhouse would be accessible from the front of the structure and
there might even be the pedestrian bridge over Canyon Road.
The StudioOneEleven recommendation most closely resembles my
concept and the corporate yard uses would be under the parking
structure, as suggested in that plan.
At least the round existing tower would be retained, renovated and
could become an information center.
Other considerations are the devastation that would occur with the
moving of the corporate yard there, the addition of traffic on Canyon
Road and the wasted time city employees would be paid to go back and
forth and the use of more gas getting to ACT V. If anything has to be
done out there, it should be more landscaping.
ANDY WING
Laguna Beach
* The Coastline Pilot is eager to run your letters. If your
letter does not appear it may be due to space restrictions and will
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