A new vision of Downtown appears
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The die is cast. The roulette wheel is spinning. The dealer is
laying down the final card. Now, it is all about waiting and seeing
if Costa Mesa’s gamble on its Downtown pays off.
For years, the personality of Downtown -- home to Triangle Square,
Goat Hill Tavern and the long-empty 1901 Newport, among other
buildings and businesses -- has been unclear. Is it a shopping
district? An entertainment center? Is it a nightspot? With last
month’s Planning Commission approval of a nightclub for 1901 Newport,
formerly called Pacific Savings Plaza, and news this week that a new
restaurant featuring dancing is headed to Triangle Square, it appears
the uncertainty is over.
Downtown is about entertainment, especially of the late-night
variety.
The gamble with this direction is two-fold: Can the area sustain
itself in competition with the Irvine Spectrums, the Downtown Disneys
and the various nightspots in Newport Beach? And do city leaders
understand what more late-night fun will mean?
History offers a relatively positive answer to the former gamble.
While Triangle Square has had a tough decade, with empty storefronts
and in-and-out tenants, it has had big success in the last few years
with the Yardhouse. Other nightspots along Newport Boulevard are
typically packed with revelers, and have been since Costa Mesa was
known as Goat Hill.
Building on these successes makes sense. Identifying Downtown as
an entertainment spot and then systematically adding more
entertaining choices would seem a good bet.
Whether city leaders have their eyes wide open when making these
decisions is a separate matter. The potential problems are obvious
and at their most likely with nightclubs and bars: increased crime,
whether drunk driving, fights or vandalism; and quality-of-life
complaints, largely related to noise.
So far, there seems to have been little discussion about such
concerns. There ought to be, and residents deserve an opportunity to
say what they think about plans for Downtown.
If this new conception of Downtown is what city leaders want, then
the City Council and Planning Commission should continue looking for
ways to add to the area’s appeal. But they should also be prepared to
handle the inevitable problems.
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