Costa Mesa planners explore design awards
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Lolita Harper
The Planning Commission is a step closer to meeting another annual
community goal this week after reviewing a program that would
publicly recognize exceptionally designed developments.
Commissioners said an award system will encourage developers to
think of new and original concepts in community planning and design,
and assist the city in the natural transition from old to modern, as
more and more buildings are being redeveloped.
Planning Commissioner Eleanor Egan said she doesn’t want to see
developers simply copying previously recognized projects in an effort
to gain favor. The award program is not intended to set precedent for
a desired type of design, but to encourage originality and
innovation, she said
“We want to encourage the idea of building something that is a
pleasure to look at as opposed to something that is boring or purely
utilitarian,” Egan said.
The Planning Commission plans to recognize a development every six
months -- once in January and again in July. Because commissioners
just missed the summer deadline, the first awards would take place in
October and then again at the beginning of the year to get the
program back on a sixth-month schedule, said Mike Robinson, the city
manager of planning and development.
Projects are eligible for nomination if they have been completed
within the designated six-month period. Criteria include overall
excellence in architecture, protection of the integrity or
enhancement of the existing neighborhood, incorporation of public art
into the overall project, and use of energy conservation features or
building concepts.
Given the recent opposition to various residential additions --
most notably two proposed second-story additions that were denied by
city leaders -- Robinson said it was important to make sure that
future projects were well-suited to the existing neighborhood.
He admitted that it may be difficult to propose innovation when
neighbors call for conformity. Developers can include pioneering
enhancements that still fit with the overall scheme of the
surrounding area, he said. In many cases, the ground-breaking design
concepts will not be aesthetic.
“It may not be visible from the outside but still shows some sort
of innovation,” Robinson said.
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