Commission to vote on marine center
Alicia Robinson
The California Coastal Commission is poised to approve a
state-of-the-art marine studies center and water quality lab on
Shellmaker Island.
If the commission approves the $4-million project on Wednesday,
construction could begin next summer, said Dave Kiff, Newport Beach
assistant city manager.
The facility would house offices for state Department Fish and
Game staff, teaching labs for students and a water quality testing
lab for the county that would replace the temporary trailer now used
for water testing.
Planning the center was a collaborative effort of Fish and Game,
UC Irvine, Orange County, Newport Bay Naturalists and Friends and the
Coastal Commission.
The project design is complete and includes environmentally
friendly touches, such as solar panels for the roof, a system to
drain rainwater from the roof onto plants, and a permeable parking
surface to control runoff, Kiff said.
Shellmaker Island is made of material dredged from the bay and is
not incredibly stable, so the building would be placed on a
reinforced cement pad that would sit on the island’s surface, Kiff
said. The pad would shift in the event of an earthquake without
causing the building to collapse.
The city still needs about $1 million for the science center, but
that won’t necessarily hold the project back, Kiff said. The design
would allow the facility to be built in phases with the money that’s
already available. Construction should take about a year.
“We’re continuing to look for those funds, and we think that we’re
going to be successful in finding them,” Kiff said.
Coastal commission program analyst Fernie Sy said commission staff
members will recommend approval of the Back Bay science center plan
but with 13 conditions attached. Conditions will include more
ecological buffers to protect wetlands and a biologist on site during
construction, he said.
“I think the use is something that we do support,” Sy said.
The community has also been supportive of the project, Kiff said.
“Everybody sees Shellmaker Island as a kind of underused and
downtrodden place that, if it were restored and some of the habitat
brought back, it would really add tremendously to the habitat of the
bay overall,” he said.
Newport Bay Naturalists and Friends member Jack Keating said the
group will continue to provide educational programs in the Back Bay
after the new facility is built.
“We’ve been living with temporary facilities out at Shellmaker
Island for quite some time, so we’re really anxious to get this
project moving forward,” he said.
Bob Caustin, founder of environmental group Defend the Bay, said
he’s looking forward to development of an educational facility on the
island. The temporary buildings there now don’t give the public a
very good impression of the back bay, he said.
“It’s almost an embarrassment for a resource such as the Upper
Newport Bay to not have something like this plan,” he said.
The island would eventually have teaching and observation stations
and walking trails under this plan.
“You can go for a very short walk and see an incredible variety of
estuarian creatures,” Caustin said.
The California Coastal Commission will hear the Department of Fish
and Game’s permit request at a meeting in Monterey, Calif. on
Wednesday.
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