Residents not bowled over by decision
I have lived in Costa Mesa for the majority of my life and have been
a Mesa Verde resident for a long time, and the idea of bringing in a
Kohl’s department store is absolutely ridiculous. Let’s get this
right, Planning Commission and City Council, and let’s put in some
good family entertainment with some good restaurants and upgrade the
bowling alley and put something in that the whole community can enjoy
as opposed to another retail outlet.
Come on people, let’s get it right
GREG SPICER
Costa Mesa
I have lived in Mesa Verde for the last 19 years and I think it is
such a terrible idea. We absolutely do not need another department
store, and when we moved here 19 years ago, our whole family used
that entertainment center all the time: the ice skating, the movies
and the bowling. It was so nice that the kids could just walk over
there and have all this entertainment. There isn’t any entertainment
within walking distance in this neighborhood. We have to drive
everywhere, and the nearest nice bowling area is Fountain Valley or
Mission Viejo.
It would be really wonderful if the Segerstrom group would give us
a new entertainment center there. The ice skating would have been
popular if they hadn’t let the place get run down. And same with the
movie theaters and now the bowling alley. It is not that people do
not want to be entertained, they just want it in better condition. So
I really hope we don’t get another department store
CHARMAINE LAURIE
Mesa Verde
This situation is upsetting to me. Why can’t a city the size and
location of Costa Mesa agree to modernize the Kona Lanes and ice rink
and gives the kids [and adults] a place to go for recreation?
I don’t think we need any more retail space. There is enough
already, and with the state of the economy being as it is, many
retailers as well as other businesses are finding a tough go of it.
For a city that advertises itself as that of the arts, it seems
sad to even consider taking away a part of old-time America and a
recreation place for families to go to. I am adamantly opposed to the
Kohl project. The song says it all: “They paved paradise and put up a
parking lot.”
RALPH ROLLINS
Costa Mesa
I am in support of keeping Kona Lanes. It has been here for very
many years, and we need more family-oriented places to bring our
children and be able to do family things. I think we have enough
retail stores in the area and I think we need to concentrate on our
kids and things we can do with our children and where children can go
to keep them off the streets.
I think that the owners of the property should give Kona Lanes a
long lease so that they could also refurbish the lanes and the
exterior of the building to make it more updated, which would
therefore bring in a lot more people.
PAMELA WIENER
Costa Mesa
I believe that Costa Mesa should not go by the way that Los
Angeles, the Valley and other places that only concern themselves
with growth, development, that silver dime. Stores that are not
needed are brought in while historical places or businesses such as
Kona Lanes are torn down.
There should be some compromise, at worst, to keep Kona Lanes
there, and I believe redevelopment of that area should include what
was there: another ice rink, another theater complex or maybe even a
small playhouse.
THAD SOLLOWAY
Costa Mesa
Please preserve the Kona Lanes as it is now. Maybe a little
face-lift, but keep its character.
GEORGE QUEZADA
Costa Mesa
Please leave Kona Lanes as is -- we don’t need a store there.
LORI JARVIS
Newport Beach
Since moving to Costa Mesa in 2001, I have been an active bowler
at Kona Lanes and look forward to my Thursday night league. Despite
its current state of repair, Kona presents a unique social gathering
place in Costa Mesa -- it is virtually the only place left that is
not a bar, restaurant or retail outlet. It attracts a wide
demographic, from seniors to UC Irvine students, and is very popular
with children’s birthday parties, etc.
While it is indeed sad that the cinema and the ice rink are
closed, with a corresponding painful lack of income for the owners,
do we really need yet another retail outlet in Costa Mesa?
Personally, I think not.
So, to answer the question you posed in the newspaper, what should
be done with Kona Lanes? My ideal solution would be to refurbish the
property while retaining most of the historical aspects of the lanes,
for example, the unique roadside sign and the wood lanes. I noticed
that Kona recently advertised itself as “retro bowling,” and that
environment should be preserved. However, the retro leaking roof,
retro men’s room, and retro unreliable lane equipment would not be
missed.
Let’s make Kona Lanes an entertainment facility that Costa Mesa
can be proud of.
DICK EASSOM
Costa Mesa
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