Home Ranch developers propose a revision
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Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- Changes may be afoot for the proposed Home Ranch plan as
officials for C.J. Segerstrom & Sons announced they would be willing to
build high-quality, single-family townhomes or condominiums instead of
high-density apartments.
The original proposal for the 93-acre project was redesigned last year
to add housing, as well as to reduce building heights and the square-foot
density of the office space.
The latest proposal would reduce the density from 29 homes per acre to
between 12 and 18 homes per acre, said Carol Hoffman, principal for
Government Solutions, which conducted tours of the property Monday and
Tuesday.
The amended plan for the site -- a lima bean farm bordered by the San
Diego Freeway, Fairview Road, Harbor Boulevard and Sunflower Avenue --
calls for a 308,000-square-foot Ikea furniture store, 791,050 square feet
of office space, 252,648 square feet of industrial business and 464
homes.
Though she awaits more information on the revision, Mayor Libby Cowan
said it shows the developer is listening and responding to the community.
“I’m very interested in what they have to say, and I look forward to
the negotiation process,” Cowan said. “I think there are opportunities
for us to do a quality project.”
Planning Commissioner Walt Davenport said the revision could change
some minds.
“I know the community has had some concerns about high-density rental
housing, and I think the suggestion to go to a lower-density home
ownership is going to alleviate some concern,” he said.
Councilman Chris Steel was not available for comment but previously
has said he was concerned about the rental housing. Citizens for the
Improvement of Costa Mesa Chairwoman Janice Davidson said Monday the
change begins to create a much better project.
But Robin Leffler, another Costa Mesa resident, said her opinion
remained unchanged. Her concerns include the aesthetics of the Ikea store
and the parts of the project expected to “significantly exceed” the
general plan requirements for the site, such as traffic generation and
the density of the industrial park.
Three homeowners associations worry that the project could strain
police and fire services, and increase traffic and urban runoff.
In two recent tours, Segerstrom and Ikea officials offered
counterpoints to many of the concerns.
The freeway would block most homes’ views of the Ikea, which would in
turn be most visible from the freeway, Hoffman said.
Even considering the project’s cost to city services, the tax revenue
the project is expected to generate will bring the city a net profit of
$1.7 million each year, she said, while a project built to comply with
the current general plan would cost the city about $45,286 annually.
Hoffman also explained that the housing is proposed at Sunflower
Avenue and Susan Street, not at Fairview Road and South Coast Drive,
which some opponents had feared.
The final tour is scheduled to take place from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. May
12, with a reservation deadline of Wednesday.
For more information, call (714) 754-5610.
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