Land deal reached for Arts Center expansion
S.J. Cahn
COSTA MESA -- Strike up the orchestra. The land is ready.
A year after pledging six acres of land for the final expansion of the
Performing Arts Center, the Segerstrom family and the center’s board of
directors have worked out a formal agreement to transfer ownership of the
land to the board.
“Great is the only word I can use,” said Roger Kirwan, chairman of the
center’s board. “We’re there.”
Jerry Mandel, the center’s president, echoed Kirwan’s exuberance.
“This will enable us to complete our dream, and that is, frankly, to have
a center that is second to none in the country,” Mandel said of the
proposed Segerstrom Center for the Arts. “This will become really and
truly the Lincoln Center of the West. You’ll have here the most exquisite
theater.”
Now that the center has the land, all that’s needed is the money to pay
for the expansion, which will cost somewhere between $175 million and
$200 million.
The center will be designed by world-renowned architect Cesar Pelli, who
designed the Plaza Tower in Costa Mesa and the world’s tallest building,
the 88-story twin Petronas Towers in Malaysia. Russell Johnson will
provide the design for the acoustics.
Raising that money should become easier now that the center has ownership
of the land, Kirwan said.
“The major donors that we have been talking with wanted, rightly, to see
the land grant,” he said. That way they could be assured there are no
strings attached, he said.
“Everything that could be considered a string has been worked out
amicably,” Kirwan added.
The so-called “quiet” fund-raising from major donors typically provides
half of the total money raised.
The land ownership transfer is to take place by the end of the month.
The site is at the southwest corner of Town Center Drive and Avenue of
the Arts.
Kirwan said the gift of the land is just about priceless because it is so
close to the center.
Plans for the land include two halls -- one with about 2,000 seats, the
other with 500 -- which will allow smaller groups to perform at the
center. The South Coast Repertory Theater will be expanded and there will
also be a central plaza that can hold as many as 6,000 people.
The emphasis in the new halls will be on creating the best possible
acoustics, Mandel said.
He noted that the addition is meant to last 100 years.
“Great concert halls last that long,” he said. “You want to make sure you
put what you want in it.”
Groundbreaking could take place within a year.
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