Retail space on the way
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Alicia Robinson
In keeping with the office and retail mix of the area, a new building
being constructed at the corner of Irvine Avenue and 17th Street will house mainly retail space with some office space on the second floor.
The building replaces a Coco’s restaurant that occupied the site
from around 1960 until last year.
Developer Richard Dick & Associates will also renovate the
existing building on the site, called Westcliff Square. Construction
for both will cost about $2 million.
Richard Dick & Associates is on the verge of leasing the new
building to a retail company that would open its first Orange County
location there, property manager Melanie Briggs said.
One company is looking at taking most of the building, Briggs
said, but she can’t name the company before the leases are signed.
The new building will use stone on the exterior and a cylindrical
portion on one corner will be glass. The existing building on the
site houses attorney, dentist, real estate and other offices as well
as retail business including a hair salon and furniture consignment
shop. It will be slightly expanded and renovated to look more like
the new building, and the site will get all new landscaping, Briggs
said.
“We’ll be getting some new tenants on the first floor once the
renovations are done,” she said. “We’ll be expanding the retail,
putting in new restrooms [and] redoing the courtyard.”
Coco’s reorganized after a near bankruptcy and the company chose
to build new restaurants instead of renovating old ones, said Scott
Dobbins, a spokesman for Hankey Investment Co., the owner of the
site.
It was actually kind of sad to see Coco’s go because we don’t have
a lot of family restaurants,” Newport Beach Assistant City Manager
Sharon Wood said.
But the 17th Street corridor is a thriving business district, she
said.
“That is a very good business area,” she said. “I think it does
well at fitting in with the residential neighborhood around it, so
they’re good uses economically but also good uses that fit well with
residents.”
Richard Dick & Associates, which also leases office space to the
Daily Pilot, wanted to work on the new development because it was
successful with the nearby Westcliff Court, Briggs said.
“I’ve had a lot of interest in it [from possible tenants],” she
said. “A lot of people wanted to put another restaurant back in but
we didn’t go with restaurant because the parking requirement is so
high.”
The building should be complete with a tenant moved in by Aug. 1,
she said.
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