EDITORIAL
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It didn’t take 50 years, but it sure felt like it.
On Monday, the Costa Mesa City Council finally reached an agreement
with Commonwealth Partners on a plan that will ensure the California
Scenario garden is kept up and kept open to the public.
Commonwealth, along with South Coast Partners and the Orange County
Performing Arts Center, is working to build a pedestrian-oriented
cultural arts district at Town Center, an area bordered by Bristol
Street, Sunflower Avenue, Avenue of the Arts and the San Diego Freeway.
The city readily approved the other parts of the project proposed by
South Coast Partners, which owns South Coast Plaza, and the Center.
But the future of the garden -- designed by Isamu Noguchi in 1982 --
proved a major sticking point as city officials tried to work out a deal
with Commonwealth to develop its part of Town Center.
At first, it appeared an agreement had been reached under which
Commonwealth would maintain the garden for 25 years. Surprisingly for
Commonwealth officials, the City Council backtracked and nixed it as its
members -- led by Councilwoman Linda Dixon -- began pressing for the
garden to be maintained “in perpetuity.” That wording sent Commonwealth
into a whirl, which is understandable: Commonwealth, which all along
stressed it had no plans to alter the garden, is in the business of
making money.
Finally, last week -- and not without last-minute glitches that almost
delayed the deal again -- the council and Commonwealth reached the end of
a negotiation that should never have dragged on at such length.
Commonwealth, after all, owns the garden and could have torn the whole
thing down, ending the back-and-forth debate in the worst way possible.
But it didn’t, and the city should have recognized that as the good-faith
gesture it was.
The Noguchi garden rightly deserves protection, and the council,
residents and Commonwealth should be pleased with what is in place. But
with so many other important issues facing the city -- redevelopment of
the Westside, opposition to development in other parts of town, not to
mention a council that is running less than smoothly -- these
negotiations were an unfortunate use of energy that could have been
better spent.
With all this bad history, the council still must approve the rest of
its agreement with Commonwealth. It would be a shame for more time to be
wasted.
Still, there is one positive to find from all the messy negotiations:
Perhaps all the press reports will raise residents’ interest in the
garden, many of whom hadn’t visited it and didn’t even know it was there.
They should see what all the fuss was about. It’s on Anton Boulevard
behind the El Torito Grill.
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