Downtown feel is already changing
EDITOR’S NOTEBOOK
Last week, the City Council approved a controversial project that
will completely alter the look and feel of Downtown Huntington Beach.
Some say it is high time for that change; others feel allowing The
Strand to be built would be a colossal mistake.
The debate, despite arguments over parking spaces and such, is
primarily over whether or not the 226,500-square-foot project, which
would bring a hotel and shopping venue with chain stores such as
Victoria’s Secret, Express and Abercrombie & Fitch, is a “good fit”
for Downtown.
Certainly change is afoot in Surf City. Small bungalows rented out
by surfers have given way to towering million-dollar homes. But many
of those who oppose The Strand still hope to preserve the charm of
Downtown.
I have viewed this debate of drawing tourism and much needed
revenue vs. preserving the integrity of Surf City in a detached
manner, and have thought it would be convenient to have those shops
Downtown rather than in a stuffy mall.
But there are some things that just don’t fit Downtown.
A couple weeks ago I saw the sign -- four letters that made me
groan -- IHOP. There is an International House of Pancakes going in
at the corner of Main Street and Olive Avenue. Ugh.
My friends and I instantly agreed that the big chain had no place
in Downtown Huntington Beach.
Now, I don’t have anything against IHOP; it just doesn’t belong
there. There may not even be a solid, rational reason. It just seems
wrong. Another breakfast place, fine -- but a mom and pop place like
the Sugar Shack, or at least a place with a California/Surf City feel
like the Shore House down the road.
I realize that the property owner has the right to lease the space
out to whomever they please as long as codes and whatnot are met, but
it is a disastrous addition to Downtown.
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