St. Mark picks new home
June Casagrande
St. Mark Presbyterian Church leaders have their sights on an empty
space at the corner of MacArthur Boulevard and San Joaquin Hills Road
for a new home for the campus.
An environmental study now underway for the 34,000-square-foot
project should be available for public review by Feb. 17.
St. Mark leaders hope to break ground late this year on the
26,000-square-foot first phase of the new church, on a lot they will
acquire from the Irvine Co. for an undisclosed amount. The new church
will include larger administrative, school and counseling facilities,
but will not include much added worship space, Pastor Gary Collins
said.
“The new facility will let us be more accessible to the community,
not just to our congregation, but we’ll have more space for community
services like our preschool and our counseling services,” Collins
said.
The new church will require a general plan amendment to change its
zoning -- it’s zoned as open space -- but the project won’t trigger a
Greenlight vote. The Planning Commission will vote on the project,
and the City Council will likely have the final say.
The city’s Environmental Quality Affairs Committee examined the
plans late last year and came up with a laundry list of concerns for
the environmental study to examine. One concern, committee Chairman
Robert Hawkins said, is that cars turning right into the new church
from Macarthur Boulevard could slow traffic behind them. Church
leaders said they have included a turn lane in their plans that they
hope will avert such problems, but that they’re willing to modify the
plans if the environmental study shows that the lane won’t do the
trick.
Committee members also said they were concerned about water
quality, noise, open space and traffic, Hawkins said. The
environmental study will include a traffic study and will examine the
other concerns. Church officials note that their plans for the
7.38-acre site include 1 1/3 acres of habitat area and 2.6 acres of
landscaping. The new church would add about 500 trees to the site,
many of them used as a noise buffer between the church and the
adjacent golf course and apartment building, which are from 9 feet to
30 feet lower in elevation than the church.
The move was prompted by Our Lady Queen of Angels Catholic Church,
which is next door to St. Mark’s present site near the intersection
of Jamboree Road and East Bluff Drive. In hopes of expanding their
own facility, Our Lady officials approached St. Mark leaders and
offered to buy the property for an undisclosed amount. Expansion
plans for Our Lady Queen of Angels are not yet complete, said Scott
Barnard, consultant for both churches.
* JUNE CASAGRANDE covers Newport Beach and John Wayne Airport. She
may be reached at (949) 574-4232 or by e-mail at
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.