Officials approve fairground proposal with amphitheater
Lolita Harper
COSTA MESA -- Orange County Fairground officials unanimously approved
a preliminary 10-year master plan Thursday that includes a revived
amphitheater and vowed to address details later in the process.
Board President Curt Pringle reminded audience members many times that
the plans for the site -- bordered by the Costa Mesa Freeway, Fair Drive,
Fairview Road and Arlington Drive -- were still in the early stages.
“We are simply pointing out where we want to be and will start walking
in that direction,” Pringle said.
Frank Haselton of LSA Associates -- hired to manage and develop the
master plan process -- presented the plan, which called for the reduction
of the equestrian center, more indoor exhibition space, more parking and
the rebirth of a smaller amphitheater.
Past meetings where discussions have included the master plan
attracted more than 100 people, requiring a large meeting venue and
microphone, but Thursday’s crowd fit into a small meeting room and the
discussion was more intimate.
Horse enthusiasts posted a partial victory by keeping the center at
the fairground, instead of having it moved to another location, as was
previously suggested. The master plan called for a 50% reduction of the
equestrian center, freeing up seven acres for parking.
The new facility would remove two arenas and hold about 140 animals.
No trainers or boarders would be displaced, but a handful of audience
members condemned the board’s decision to reduce the center, saying it
would negatively affect the business owners on the property.
“I hope this board keeps in perspective that our responsibility is to
the broader community,” board member Randy Smith said. “I’m not
suggesting we don’t care about the plight of the business owners, but
that should not be our focus.”
Residents, who said they were concerned not about profit margins but
property values, wanted to know specific information about the revival of
the amphitheater.
Despite a long history of resident opposition to the amphitheater,
fairground officials decided to move forward with plans to revive the now
empty concert venue while scaling back its size and profit margin. During
the annual fair, entertainment acts would perform at what was previously
known as the Pacific Ampitheatre, General Manager Becky Bailey-Findley
said.
Although future plans for the amphitheater call for a sizable
reduction -- only 140,000 square feet and 8,500 seats -- residents of
nearby College Park and Mesa Del Mar neighborhoods have been vocal
opponents to its revival, saying it was too loud.
But clamors from the residents quieted over the last month, with only
two people speaking about it during the public comment portion of the
meeting.
College Park resident Patrick Clark said he was concerned with who
would manage the facility, hoping to avoid the large profit-making rock
concerts the venue hosted in the 1980s. Officials said they were not
aware of any bids to occupy or manage the venue.
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