Resident petitions against Home Ranch
Andrew Glazer
COSTA MESA -- After hours of precise mathematical calculation, he
produced sketches depicting a yellow monolith hovering over his
neighborhood’s quiet nest of cul-de-sacs and lawns.
Brent Neumeyer, an erstwhile trigonometry and geology instructor, hopes
the drawings will convince his Halecrest Hall of Fame neighbors to fight
the nine-story office building and IKEA furnishings store proposed for a
nearby bean farm.
“I don’t want sickos looking down from the offices with a telescope and
watching me watering my tomatoes in my underwear,” he said, standing next
to a rose bush in front of his ranch-style home. “I should be able to
have some privacy in my backyard.”
The city’s two-volume, eight-pound draft report outlines the proposed
Home Ranch project’s impacts on the neighborhood, but does not include
studies about how a nine-story building might block views or, perhaps,
compromise residents’ privacy.
“There must have been somebody who lead somebody else to believe it
wouldn’t be a factor there,” said Perry Valantine, the city’s development
services director. “But we will have the consultants check the diagrams
and see if they’re accurate. If they are, we’ll definitely submit them to
the final report.”
Paul Freeman, a spokesman for developer C.J. Segerstrom, said Neumeyer’s
sketches on the whole did appear accurate.
“Maybe the dimensions were a bit off,” Freeman said, “but it would be
totally reasonable for him to submit them and I’m hoping to meet with him
myself.”
The property is designated for homes and small industries, but the
Segerstroms are asking the city to make an exception.
Neumeyer and the Halecrest Hall of Fame Homeowners Assn. -- in addition
to many homeowners surrounding the proposed 93-acre project site -- have
vociferously opposed the Home Ranch project. They say cars going to and
leaving the development would flood their quiet streets with traffic and
pump smog into the air. They have also complained that the office
buildings would block views.
Neumeyer said he spent more than 40 hours creating the 10 diagrams, which
illustrate the proposed buildings from 10 different angles from various
points in the neighborhood -- including his and his mother’s frontyards.
He is circulating the diagrams, along with petitions, to other homeowners
in the area.
Costa Mesa residents have until mid-May to request information about the
project from the city’s planning department. The city’s consultants are
required to respond to the requests before the Planning Commission and
City Council vote on the project.
Neumeyer said he hopes the fruits of his labor make it into the final
report.
“I just want to make sure people can’t see into my mother’s backyard,”
Neumeyer explained.
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