Big houses remain big Newport issue
June Casagrande
“Mansionization” continues to emerge as potentially the most
controversial issue in the city’s general plan update process,
responses to a recent city mailer suggest.
The third in a series of newsletters on the general plan update
process was sent out recently to all the households in the city. A
number of phone calls and e-mails to City Hall followed, many of them
from residents who want to be able to build large homes or duplexes
on their property.
“All of the callers on the mansionization issue were individuals
who have purchased residential property as an investment, expecting
to be able to develop large homes and duplexes similar to those we
are seeing today,” Assistant City Manager Sharon Wood reported to the
City Council in a memo. “Many of these people are not large
developers, but individuals for whom this property investment is
their nest egg.”
But at other points during the general plan update process, a very
different view has prevailed: that of residents who consider
mansionization -- the trend toward building large residential
structures on relatively small lots -- a serious problem. Corona del
Mar, in particular, is a place that some residents say should have
its quaint character protected from large homes out of sync with
others nearby.
City officials hope to be able to gather as much input as possible
on the subject to execute residents’ wishes when the general plan is
updated. The document, which sets guidelines, rules and goals for
every aspect of the city’s future, will soon be revised for the first
time in decades. The city is in the middle of its “visioning” process
of gathering residents’ input on the document and the issues it
addresses.
The next step in the process will be a phone survey of about 1,000
Newport Beach residents and 150 businesses. Wood is working with a
city-contracted consulting firm to decide what issues and questions
should be part of the 10-minute resident telephone interviews.
“The survey, hopefully, will supplement and clarify what we’ve
been hearing so far on everything from tourism to traffic,” Wood
said.
The telephone survey will likely take place in October.
On Aug. 26, the city expects to present results of a traffic study
conducted as part of the general plan update. The much-anticipated
study will include projections on just how bad traffic in Newport
Beach will get in the coming decades.
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