Greenlight targets another building
June Casagrande
Greenlight leader Phil Arst says it’s another example of the city
trying to circumvent the Greenlight law. Mayor Tod Ridgeway says it’s
another example of Arst trying to grab power.
Arst on Friday filed a formal complaint about a development, the
Newport Technology Center, at 500 Superior Ave.
The building, on the site of a former Hughes Aircraft
manufacturing facility, was approved several years ago for industrial
use such as research and development. The building had sat empty
until recently, when an advertising agency moved in.
“The fact that they brought in a tenant that is not [research and
development] shows a lack of code enforcement by the city and makes
one wonder how they will observe restrictions in the future,” Arst
said.
The property owner, New Superior Group LLC, has asked the city to
allow 50% the building to be put to general office use instead of
research and industrial.
Before the dot-com crash, it was reasonable for the city and the
developer to envision high-tech tenants, but changing times have left
the building empty, Planning Director Patricia Temple said.
The Planning Department will consider the request to change the
use once a traffic study is complete.
The Daily Pilot is in early negotiations with the owner to lease
office space at the center.
Mayor Tod Ridgeway criticized Arst’s comments on the Newport
Technology Center, relating them to Arst’s recently announced
opposition to a plan to build at hotel at Lido Marina Village.
“I thought that Greenlight was supposed to be all about the
traffic,” Ridgeway said. “The city has sought a professional traffic
study to determine if there should be a change in use. Phil
criticizes the Newport Technology Center before the traffic study is
even done, just as he took a position against a new use in Lido
Marina that would reduce [traffic] intensity there. I think this
shows that Greenlight doesn’t want to listen. They just want to
politicize.”
Arst believes, however, that development of the technology center
would have gone to a vote of the people if it had originally been
designated as office space. Instead, he said, the city approved the
area for the industrial use already allowed in the city’s general
plan but are now changing those terms.
The request to change the building to just half industrial tenants
would not trigger a Greenlight vote because it would not require a
general plan amendment.
* 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.