A rustic plan in store for cove
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Paul Clinton
CRYSTAL COVE -- State planners are using a handful of rustic,
affordable cabins on the Marin County coastline as a model for the state
park here as they try to tie up $2.8 million in additional funding for
the park’s renovation.
Attorneys with both California State Parks and the California Coastal
Commission are hammering out the final details of an extension to a 1991
agreement that earmarked the funds for Crystal Cove.
The deal making comes as state parks officials are searching for funds
to restore the 46 cottages, which are listed on the National of Register
of Historic Places.
“We want to give [the funds] to state parks, and they want to take
[them],” commission spokeswoman Sarah Christie said.
As part of the 1991 agreement, the two agencies decided to use the
money to build a youth hostel on the inland part of the parkland.
The money was handed over to the commission in the 1980s by the
developer of the St. Regis Hotel in Dana Point. The money was $1.4
million at the time but has grown to $2.8 million with interest.
After the state pulled the plug on a luxury resort plan for the cove
in the spring, the hostel plans also fell by the wayside.
“I think we hoped all along that the money would stay with us,” state
parks spokesman Roy Stearns said. “We’re delighted the coastal commission
wants to continue that.”
The state Department of Finance has set a June deadline for the
commission to hand over the funds.
In reworking the grant, the commission has agreed to change the
initial provision that required the state parks agency to accommodate 132
guests with the money, Christie said.
The grant is an alternative to a proposal by Assemblyman John
Campbell, whose district includes the state park, to use rental revenue
from the trailers at El Morro to pay for the restoration. Campbell’s plan
has been rejected by Rusty Areias, director of state parks.
The decision to model the project on Steep Ravine, 10 rustic cabins in
Northern California, was greeted warmly by activists involved in the
issue.
The cabins, which are in Mt. Tamalpais State Park in Mill Valley, can
be rented for as little as $15 per day.
“It’s extremely modest in price,” activist Jeannette Merrilees said.
“It’s what I would call spartan. People come to see the natural beauty,
not shop in the gift shop or be educated.”
The cabins are also usually booked up eight months in advance.
“Within 15 minutes [of being available], they will be booked,” said
Marin District Supt. Ken Leigh. “They are truly crude cabins.”
State parks agency planners have begun planning a mixture of uses at
Crystal Cove, which would include an interpretive center, overnight
rentals and a scientific research center.
Heiress Joan Irvine Smith, whose family sold the cove to the state and
who has pushed for the project to include some element that educates the
public about the cove’s heritage, said she also approves of the Steep
Ravine model.
“It makes perfect sense,” Smith said. “You want to keep the character
of Crystal Cove as it is. We don’t want to upgrade it.”
* Paul Clinton covers the environment and John Wayne Airport. He may
be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail ato7
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