Next step set in Balboa renovation
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June Casagrande
After 10 years of waiting, officials and residents banking on
Balboa Village renovations to give the area a much-needed shot in the
arm will soon see the earth move.
City Council members on Tuesday approved a $2.8-million contract
with Hillcrest Construction to perform the second phase of the
three-part renovation for the area.
While the contractor has not yet set a date to begin work,
Assistant City Manager Sharon Wood said, time is of the essence.
“We have to finish by summer, according to the coastal development
permit conditions, but we also have to accommodate traffic for the
boat parade. So beginning the work soon means we will be better
prepared for the boat parade,” Wood said.
This phase of the project, funded largely with Community
Development Block Grant money, will mean new street pavement,
sidewalks, landscaping, street furniture and street lighting on Main
Street from Pier Plaza to the Balboa Pavilion; on Washington and Palm
Streets from Oceanfront to Balboa Boulevard; and on Oceanfront from A
Street to Adams Street. Workers will likely tear up one side of the
street at a time to allow traffic to use the other side.
The fate of two ficus trees remaining on Main Street is still in
the court’s hands.
On Sept. 18, the city played its trump card in its battle with the
Balboa Arbor Society over 25 ficus trees there: An early-morning work
crew cut down 23 of the 25 trees before a court injunction called a
stop to the work. Arbor society President Linda Grant has since asked
council members to consider leaving the trees or replanting them in a
city park, but City Manager Homer Bludau said the trees probably
wouldn’t survive replanting.
Phase One of the village project was completed at the end of May
and included the reconstruction of Balboa Boulevard, renovation of
both piers and resurfacing of the Balboa Pier Parking lot and the
pier plaza area. The cost of the first phase was about $4.5 million.
Mayor Tod Ridgeway has said the work is crucial to reviving a
“dying village.”
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