Strand gains council approval
Jose Paul Corona
The Strand project, slated to revamp Downtown Huntington Beach,
was given the green light by the City Council Monday night by a 4-2
vote.
Unless an appeal of plans for the 226,500-square-foot project is
filed with the California Coastal Commission, it will be built.
James A. Lane, spokesman for the project’s main opposition, a
group called Citizens Against Redevelopment, said they have not yet
decided if they will mount opposition.
“We’re just trying to determine what our next step will be,” he
said.
By approving the project, Lane says, the current council has left
a potential problem for the four council members who will be elected
next month.
“The lame duck members on the council were determined to pass this
thing as their legacy,” he said, he said of the four outgoing council
members who voted in favor of the project.
Plans call for a 152-room hotel, several major retail stores and
an underground parking lot.
It is a plan that is touted by many and despised by an arguably
commensurate faction.
“The project doesn’t seem right for Downtown,” said Mayor Debbie
Cook, who opposed the project. “It’s just not right.”
Cook said she disagrees with the way that the city uses
redevelopment and feels that the project will break up Main Street.
“It creates two Main Streets,” she said. “I feel like we’re
turning our back on Main Street.”
Rather than the small shops and restaurants, the new plaza will
offer major retail stores such as Victoria’s Secret, Express and
Johnny Rockets.
But many redevelopment advocates say it is just what the Downtown,
and the city coffers, needs.
“With the Hyatt we need a Downtown with shopping and dining,” said
Councilwoman Shirely Dettloff, who supported the project. “If we
don’t get something built there, the future of Downtown is in
jeopardy.”
The Strand project has met with some serious opposition in the
past. Last November the Citizens Against Redevelopment challenged the
deal between the city and developer, CIM on three legal points, which
forced the city to scale back the project.
Last year’s suit prompted the developer to file its own appeal of
the Planning Commission’s Oct. 1 decision this year, to force the
project to go before the council now, said Gustavo A. Duran, housing
and redevelopment manager for the city.
By doing so, the developer hopes to avoid any future problems or
litigation, he said.
Although the new plans have elicited far fewer objections from
Downtown residents than in the past, there are some who are
concerned, saying the project does not offer adequate parking.
A total of 405 spaces will be available in the underground lot.
“The parking is inadequate,” Lane said. “If this was really a good
project I would be there supporting it, but this is not a good
project.”
The Strand is slated for the area bounded by Main Street, Pacific
Coast Highway and Walnut and 5th avenues. It will be made up of six
building on two city blocks.
The two-level underground parking structure will include a valet
service and an attendant ticket booth.
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