Is there a Port in art center storm?
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Mathis Winkler
CORONA DEL MAR -- As City Council members prepare to decide Tuesday
whether they will even consider a proposal for an arts and education
center on open space behind the central library, the owner of the defunct
Port Theater said Friday he’d consider giving the center a home in his
building.
“Perhaps I can fulfill a niche and help out the city,” owner Scott
Burnham said. “Everybody has an idea for the Port Theater, and when I
started getting phone calls on this particular issue, it sounded like
there might be [a possibility] for complimentary use.”
The theater shut its doors in August 1998, and Burnham said he’s been
taking his time to come up with an alternative use.
“I’ve had the luxury of having the ability to be patient,” he said. “I
don’t need to quickly reopen the doors.”
But he added that he’d already considered splitting the theater’s
980-seat auditorium into two levels. While the top floor could be used
for classrooms -- a crucial component of the center proposal -- the lower
level could still serve as an auditorium capable of seating more than 600
people.
Environmentalists adamantly oppose building a center on the city’s
already scarce open space and have suggested the theater as an
alternative site.
“I would think something could be worked out,” said Allan Beek, who
has also brought up the Balboa Theater, the Orange County Museum of Art,
Bayview Landing and Corona del Mar High School as other alternative
sites.
Project supporters have questioned those places as workable
alternatives. The Balboa Theater will function as a professional center
when it opens next year. Further, museum officials said that while they
are looking at other sites to expand, they are years away from vacating
their home at Newport Center.
Bayview Landing is earmarked for affordable housing for seniors. And
the Corona del Mar High School and the Port Theater sites would cause
major traffic problems in their respective neighborhoods, center
proponents said. At the Port Theater, there’s also the issue of parking.
Arts Commissioner Don Gregory, one of the leading proponents of a
center, said he still believes a majority of council members might allow
further study of the site behind the library at Tuesday’s meeting.
“I’m very happy to sit down with any well-meaning person,” Gregory
said, adding that he still doubted that the theater would be adequate or
that the parking problems could be resolved.
Gregory also added that widespread support of the Port Theater as an
alternative site signaled to him that project opponents wanted to move
the center idea away from the open space and toward another site without
thinking about the consequences.
“What that says to me is, ‘Any place but here,”’ he said. “They just
want us out of there.”
Built in the 1940s, the theater existed before the city introduced
off-street parking requirements and remained open without a parking lot
for its patrons.
But Burnham said parking has never been an issue.
“People just tend to find a place to park,” he said, adding that he
would not have to find more parking if the theater opened again.
City officials said the issue’s a little trickier than that. Newport
Beach’s code states that old buildings such as the Port Theater lose
their exemption from parking requirements once they’ve been closed for a
certain length of time, said Assistant City Manager Sharon Wood.
Because Burnham has opened the theater for occasional events since the
closure, she added that she couldn’t say whether the theater could remain
exempt from stringent parking requirements without going over the
records.
Village leaders, such as Councilman Dennis O’Neil and Edward Selich,
who chairs the city’s Planning Commission and heads a group that plans to
revitalize East Coast Highway for Corona del Mar’s centennial in 2004,
said they welcomed Burnham’s interest.
“I think it would be a great idea to explore,” Selich said. “I think
people would welcome a way to save the Port Theater.”
Just like Selich, O’Neil added that center supporters, business owners
and residents would need to meet to see if there was any merit to the
idea.
“I don’t know whether it’s adequate,” said O’Neil, who favors a
passive park for the land behind the central library. “But I would think
that it’s worthy of consideration and review.”
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