Downtown all torn up
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Andrew Edwards
With little more than a week before the end of winter, the sounds of
springtime are beginning to be heard throughout the city. As the
weather warms up, sharp-eared Lagunans will be able to hear the
sounds of songbirds, fun and games at the beach -- and construction
crews tearing up the pavement Downtown.
Work has already begun on a project to fix damaged sidewalks,
repave streets and upgrade intersections in the Downtown area.
Planners want the project completed before the summer tourist season
is in full swing.
“We hope that all work will be done by mid-May,” Project Manager
Derek Wieske said.
Until the project is finished, construction work means heavy
equipment will be operating on the streets and sidewalks and parking
spaces will be closed as crews dig up concrete and repave streets.
For shops, lost parking spaces and sidewalks can interrupt business
as usual.
“Sometimes people complain [that] there’s a lack of parking,” said
Kelly Brown, the manager of Zazu on Ocean Avenue.
Brown said construction hasn’t caused major hassles, but Bret
Blackburn, manager of Sunglass Gallery on Forest Avenue, said he does
not look forward to having sidewalk construction in front of his
store.
“I don’t see what we’re going to gain from that other than a lost
day or two’s work,” Blackburn said.
At Salon DeNour, on Forest Avenue, employees cope with the project
by giving customers a heads-up on the traffic situation.
“We’re just calling our clients ahead to let them know about the
parking and the road’s closed,” skin-care consultant Kristina Standen
said.
The Public Works Department held a meeting on Monday to address
the concerns of local businesses, but only three people attended,
Wieske said.
“To us, that means things are going OK, and people can always call
us,” he said.
People with questions about the project can call (949) 497-0771.
The first phase will be to repair sidewalks, curbs and gutters,
Wieske said. The next will include resurfacing streets and improving
intersections.
Many sidewalks need to be fixed because tree roots have pushed up
on the pavement, raising the concrete and creating possible trip
hazards.
“Sometimes, a whole panel of sidewalk gets raised,” Wieske said.
Work at three intersections is planned to make it safer to walk
and drive through Downtown. The areas where work is scheduled are
Forest and Ocean avenues, Beach Street and Ocean Avenue, and Forest
Avenue and Glenneyre Street.
Construction at Forest and Ocean avenues is intended to change the
road so drivers take their turns a little easier.
“We’re going to make that a sharper turn to slow vehicles down,”
Public Works Director Steve May said.
“There haven’t been any accidents that I’m aware of, but there
have been some close calls,” May added.
Both May and Wieske said the project is progressing smoothly so
far, though crews have run into the occasional snag.
“We found an old water line that nobody knew who it belonged to,”
May said.
No water was running through the line, which was found in an alley
between Glenneyre and 2nd streets, but before it was removed, the
city had to stop and call utility companies to find out if anybody
claimed it, May said.
The construction firm hired to do the work, Sequel Contractors,
has 50 work days to finish the project, which started March 1. If
Sequel finishes ahead of schedule, the city will pay a $3,000 bonus
for every day the company beats the deadline, Wieske said.
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