What’s next up the alley for Kona Lanes?
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Yes, Kohl’s store should be approved. A better question is: Why
doesn’t the City Council and Planning Commission follow the city’s
rules and regulations. All 10 affected property owners have approved
Kohl’s plans. The plans meet the code and rules and regulations of
the city. Why not approve? Shouldn’t the city politicos be compelled
to follow the rules? If they do not, the residents of this city
should bring them to task for a clear disregard of the rules and
regulations of Costa Mesa.
Perhaps the mayor, a Mesa Verde resident, is swayed by the
opposition of Robin Leffler and Cindy Brenneman of the Mesa Verde
Community Assn. The association does not speak for all of us
residents of Mesa Verde. I for one feel that Leffler, Brenneman and
others have no business pushing the city to override city rules. The
affected home owners have approved the project, so should the
association as its members are not impacted by the project and are at
best only distant observers of the approval process. Their opposition
is misplaced.
Why listen to a negative minority? My guess is your survey will
show most of the city residents feel a good store in a convenient
location would be a wonderful replacement for what is now a derelict
eyesore. Out with the derelict. Bring on a Target and K-Mart
alternative. Bring on Kohl.
LARRY PARKER
Mesa Verde
I am 18 years old and a student. In response to the “What should
we do with Kona Lanes?” question, I suggest that Kona Lanes become
more fixed up and teenager-oriented and just maybe re-open the movie
theater and add some type of hangout place where kids can go and just
hang out.
I like it how it is now, but I wouldn’t mind if it were a little
more updated. It is very, very nice that they have such reasonable
prices as compared to Irvine Bowl or Fountain Bowl. I enjoy spending
time at Kona Lanes with friends and meeting new people, so I just
think that it would be sad if we destroyed it.
Thank you for asking for input.
LAURA MORTON
Costa Mesa
Save Kona Lanes.
Several weeks ago, you asked for reader response about the Port
Theatre in Corona del Mar. Should the old landmark be “saved”? My
thought was, of course! Why even ask?
Had Europeans razed their old landmarks (e.g. Monet’s country home
and glorious gardens, southwest of Paris; the naturalist Alexander
Humboldt’s home in Berlin; the Tour St. Jean in La Rochelle on the
French coast; the Globe Theater in Stratford-on-Avon), then American
tourists from Newport-Mesa would have no place to go. Awww, shucks.
Today you ask the same question about the Kona Lanes. How sad that
folks in Costa Mesa or Corona del Mar would even consider destroying
sites like these. How sad that some of us are so short-sighted and
have such a diluted sense of history.
Let’s shed our throw-away mentality. Kona Lanes and the Port
Theatre are located on main streets, near coffee shops and
restaurants. Don’t raze them. Refurbish them.
Bring on the tourists.
FLO MARTIN
Costa Mesa
Regarding your article, “Planners give Kona Lanes hope,” I am not
in favor of another department store in such close proximity to the
Target and Harbor Shopping Centers. The city of Costa Mesa
desperately needs more kid-friendly resources in this area. It has
been a huge loss to the Westside community with the movie theater,
Ice Capades and Kona Lanes lost. There are so few recreation and
entertainment resources for the children in this part of Costa Mesa.
With all the new shopping centers along Harbor Boulevard from Wilson
down to the San Diego Freeway, the traffic has become almost
unbearable. There have been too many bike versus car fatalities in
the last couple of years, which will probably only increase with the
addition of another large department store and more traffic
congestion. And then there is Home Ranch.
I took my kids to Irvine this week to go bowling. The bowling
alley was full of children and parents bowling, eating and playing
arcade games. In fact, there was a waiting list for lanes. Why can’t
the city of Costa Mesa and the Segerstrom dynasty find a
family-friendly use for the unoccupied buildings in the Mesa Verde
Shopping Center? Perhaps some of those Home Ranch dollars could go
toward renovating Kona Lanes to make it a top-notch recreational
center. Maybe Vans would be interested in building a skate park where
the ice rink or the theaters used to be.
While these suggestions may not generate the amount of income that
another big department store would, I bet that it would help to
generate a healthier, more family-centered and kid-friendly community
with less crime.
LINDA HOGSETT
Costa Mesa
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