Sizing up the zones
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Several second-story home addition proposals over the last five
months or so have been denied by Costa Mesa Zoning Administrator
Perry Valantine only to be overturned by the Planning Commission or
City Council. Much of the debate over such projects has rested on the
phrase “harmony and compatibility.”
City Editor James Meier wanted to learn a little more about this
concept, as well as the differing opinions on the projects, so he
stopped by Valantine’s office at City Hall on Wednesday.
Many second-story home additions that you have denied as the
zoning administrator have been approved by either the Planning
Commission or City Council. Where have you and the two planning
bodies differed?
Well, I think that things changed in about fall of last year
where, as zoning administrator, I began denying a number of
applications for second-story applications on the Eastside,
especially in areas where the properties have alleys in the rear.
Maybe I should back up a little bit.
Initially, I’m looking at design review applications. The criteria
is compatible and harmonious with the neighborhood, and I was doing
that from the standpoint of what you see on the street -- front
yards. In about fall of last year, we received a petition from a
group of homeowners on the Eastside that felt that there was another
aspect of compatibility that we weren’t considering, which was what
was it doing to back yards of these residents.
Where they have alleys in the rear is different than on properties
where they don’t have alleys. Basically, your back yard is further
forward on the lot because the garage is at the rear along the alley.
So, they presented the City Council with a petition requesting that
an overlay zone be established for their tract to change the way we
look at those things. In fact, that was continued from Monday’s
Planning Commission meeting.
Council asked us to go ahead and study that request. As a result
of the awareness now of this concern on the part of a large number of
residents over there, I started looking at new developments from the
standpoint of not only what it looks like from the street, but also
what it looks like from the neighbors’ rear yards. And that’s where I
started denying some because of the feeling that it did close in
those rear yards somewhat and provided them a little less of an open
feeling in their rear yards compared to a standard R-1 property that
doesn’t have a garage alley in the rear.
So that’s when the percentage of the approvals from the zoning
administrator reduced, I would say. A number of those were appealed
to the Planning Commission and some ultimately to the City Council.
In one case, the project was redesigned so that they got out of that
rear yard area, and I ultimately approved that redesigned project.
The other cases, they were generally overturned by commission and
council and were approved.
It’s not so much a question of a difference of opinion between a
zoning administrator and commission or council, but a matter of still
trying to feel our way through what does compatible and harmonious
really mean. It’s unfortunately not an exact science. Maybe it’s
fortunate that it’s not an exact science. It’s a rather subjective
thing.
As evidenced by some of the controversy and the differing
positions at the public hearings, there are at least two different
ways of looking at a project as to whether it fits or doesn’t fit,
and it’s just a matter of trying to get enough experience with what
the community feels is appropriate and what the Planning Commission
and City Council feels is appropriate to give us a comfort level that
we’re going in the right direction.
As the zoning administrator, do you judge projects according to
specific guidelines or do you try to tailor the projects to the
commission’s and council’s preferences?
Well, we have a set of residential design guidelines that
articulate a number of design features that we’d like to see in a
project. Basically, we don’t want to see boxes that go straight us on
all four sides. We want some variation in the wall plans and roof
treatment. There are a couple of specific numbers in there. The
second floor shouldn’t be more than 80% of the first floor, etc. But
those are just guidelines.
We’ve denied some where the second floor has been smaller than
that and approved some that were larger than that. It depends on how
the design is done.
So I think we use as guidelines -- I think the ultimate finding we
have to make is if the project is harmonious and compatible with the
neighborhood.
The genesis of this whole process came from really two different
areas. One was a project in Mesa Verde where a house was added to
that was just too large and out of scale with the neighborhood. The
other was a concern on the Eastside that a lot of this new
development was changing what was referred to as the quaint charm of
the Eastside.
So I’ve been looking at projects from a standpoint of whether the
mass of the building itself is out of scale with the neighborhood and
whether it’s affecting the charm or character of that neighborhood.
Does it really look out of place with that neighborhood.
Again, those are subjective things. I don’t use a criteria that
says, “Does Perry Valantine like this house?” It has to do with
whether the house is compatible with that neighborhood, and there’s a
lot of factors involved in that, and certainly the feeling of the
neighbors there is in an important one because, obviously, they’re
the ones who are going to have to live with it.
The Planning Commission and City Council ultimately set policy for
the city, and their direction is important in giving me some guidance
as to what they feel they’d like to see in the city. So I use them as
whether I’m on the right track or not or if I need to adjust how I’m
looking at these things.
Now, with the recent decisions, are you changing your thoughts on
these projects?
I guess if you could call it a pendulum, it’s swinging toward the
center a little bit. If it were approving too much before and denying
too much later, it may be averaging out a little bit better now. Some
of those decisions were fairly recent, so it’s hard to say what
effect it really had.
But I think they’ve all given some guidance as to what kinds of
things they feel are appropriate and important. And certainly, our
impending changes to the zoning code and design guidelines will give
us more guidance.
Now, at the same time, you’re spending countless hours on these
projects. Is it frustrating when you put so much time into these
decisions only for them to be overturned?
Not really. I’ve been here long enough that I don’t take those
things personally anymore and I know it’s part of the process. It’s
not like there’s a moral or ethical issue involved and that I feel
real upset when it gets overturned. It’s a professional disagreement
as to what’s compatible and harmonious in that neighborhood, and it’s
just part of the process.
Is it dangerous to have guidelines of “harmony and compatibility”?
Perhaps dangerous isn’t the best word.
It makes it difficult because it’s hard to measure. If the
guidelines said no more than 80% and 5 feet here and 10 feet there,
you can measure and say, “We’re there.” When it’s compatible and
harmonious, it raises the question what elements you’re looking at.
Are you looking at the size, the architectural style, the sides of
the building in a neighborhood where they’re all stucco? Those are
all things that different people look at in different ways. Is a
wood-sided building incompatible in a neighborhood where the homes
are all stucco?
I think through some of the hearings that we’ve had at the
Planning Commission and subsequently the City Council level, we’ve
found that the type of building material that is used is not an issue
that they feel is part of this discussion. To a certain extent, the
architectural design may not be an issue we need to get involved in.
It has more to do with the mass and scale of the project.
And by architectural design, I mean Tudor versus Spanish. There
are obviously architectural design issues that we get involved with
in terms of how the wall plans vary.
How did harmony and compatibility come about?
Well, there’s a general review criteria in the code that’s been
there a number of years for other discretionary projects where we
have to find, among other things, if the project is harmonious and
compatible with the neighborhood. And that applies to everything from
new construction to certain types of residential and commercial
buildings to conditional use permits.
So that general criteria of “Does this fit in the neighborhood?”
has been around for a while, and I think we’ve just repeated it in
this area to be sure that was one of the considerations that was
made. Unfortunately, it became the overriding consideration, I think.
I say unfortunately simply because it’s so hard to measure.
What will this proposed Eastside overlay zone do exactly?
The proposal was to basically limit two-story construction to
about the front half of the lot. The idea being that, where everybody
else has the rear 20 feet of the lot as their rear yard, on these
properties where the rear 20 feet is the garage and the rear yard is
20 feet in front of that and then the house happens. The idea is to
protect that second 20 feet where the actual usable rear yard is from
having two-story homes from being adjacent to that. So their proposal
was to limit about the rear 40% of the lot to single story.
The specific request is to that one tract [Tract 1154], though it clearly could apply to a number of other properties on the Eastside
that have the same characteristics.
About how many homes is this going to affect?
There are 140 homes in this tract [built in the late 1940s].
There are about 550 other lots on the Eastside that have
characteristics similar to Tract 1154. So although we’re looking at
140 homes now, it could logically be extended to about 550 more.
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