Home-addition options must be kept open
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First, let’s be clear.
We have no problem with city government striving to keep a balance
in Costa Mesa. We have no problem with it making sure that the
neighborhood ambience, the look and feel of the community is
consistent.
That’s the key word, though, consistent.
And that’s where we part ways with some recent Planning Commission
and City Council decisions to forbid homeowners from adding a second
story to a house.
It seems to us the idea that a homeowner can’t add a second story
is both unreasonable and inconsistent with the rest of the city.
Two-story homes are the norm throughout Costa Mesa -- from the
Eastside, to the Westside, to Mesa del Mar, to College Park and to
Mesa Verde. The common, consistent theme in all these neighborhoods
is that the two-story homes coexist right alongside single-story
homes.
It’s just the way it is and has been for years. In fact, it’s the
way it is and has been in probably every city in the great state of
California.
In the case of Aviemore Terrace, where a homeowner’s two-story
plans got shot down by the City Council, there is a two-story home on
that very street. Indeed the entire neighborhood is filled with
two-story homes.
Still, the Planning Commission just did the same thing Tuesday to
a homeowner from Mesa Verde, another neighborhood with many a
two-story home.
How can the council or Planning Commission arbitrarily decide any
homeowner can’t add another story to a home? How can these officials
deny this homeowner the very rights enjoyed by their fellow property
owners in Costa Mesa and countless other cities?
We suspect they can’t.
Families grow and families need space. To accommodate that lack of
space, they either build up or build out. Lacking a lot of square
footage on a property means in many cases going up is the best
option.
Now, we are in no way saying that architectural guidelines and
neighborhood character should be thrown out the two-story window.
In fact, we are strong advocates of that consistency and
preserving a neighborhood look and feel that all Costa Mesans can be
proud of. But those regulations need to be reasonable.
In Laguna Beach, that city has created a Design Review Board,
whose members are charged with approving plans submitted by
homeowners. With all the changes happening in Costa Mesa, with the
questions about the Eastside and losing that character, maybe a
Design Review Board for this town is long overdue.
In voting against the Aviemore Terrace addition, Councilman Gary
Monahan urged the homeowners to sue the city and test the laws
forbidding them to make these changes to their home.
We really think it shouldn’t have to go that far.
We urge city leaders to reverse these foggy decisions and, with
strict guidelines in place, grant this homeowner the same rights
enjoyed by others in this town.
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