A long walk to the finish
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June Casagrande
A wooden walkway winding along the water from the Arches Bridge to
the Balboa Bay Club could transform this stretch into a visitor
destination with waterfront dining, sunset strolls and even a
pedestrian bridge over Coast Highway leading from parking spaces to
the waterfront.
Is it feasible? Perhaps.
The city’s Harbor Commission tonight will hear an update on a
study on what’s being called the “Mariners Mile Waterfront Walkway”
-- a longtime pipe dream of some local leaders that is now one small
step closer to actually becoming a reality.
“The project is doable, but not easily doable,” city engineer
Lloyd Dalton said, “and it won’t be cheap.”
Until the feasibility study is complete early next year, officials
won’t even have a rough idea of how much it could cost.
One of the biggest expenses would be accommodating the 23 property
owners who would be affected by the walkway. Some businesses and even
a few homes along the Mariners Mile waterway would have access to
their properties blocked by the walkway and others might be asked to
cede a bit of their land. City officials would have to build
alternate entries for each of the properties affected by the walkway
and work with other landowners to assure that everyone gets a fair
deal.
“We don’t want them to suffer any loss of property rights due to
any construction that we do,” Dalton said. “We may have to construct
special features on their property so they have access to their
doors, etc.”
City Councilman Tod Ridgeway supports the concept, which officials
have been talking about for nearly 10 years. He said that the walkway
could do for Mariners Mile what the San Antonio River Walk did for
its namesake city in Texas.
“The San Antonio River Walk generated all the life that’s there,
and that’s what this boardwalk will do in Mariners Mile,” Ridgeway
said.
The project is still a long way from approval. The report to the
Harbor Commission tonight will be an update on the consultant’s work
so far. The information-gathering process should take until around
January.
After that, the Harbor Commission would have to approve a concept
and then send the matter to the City Council for initial approval.
Coastal Commission approval would also be required.
Councilman Don Webb, whose district includes Mariners Mile, said
it will be worth the work and the wait.
“I’m in favor of it,” Webb said. “When it’s completed, it will
give pedestrians an opportunity to see the bay in a really
interesting way along the frontage.”
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
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