Montage expands its holdings
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Barbara Diamond
Montage Hotels and Resorts and its partners have become major
landowners in South Laguna in the past two years with no plans
announced for the two most recent acquisitions.
The partnership created by hotel industry veteran Alan Fuerstman,
president of Montage, unnamed investors and Athens Group, developers
of the former Treasure Island Mobile home Park, bought the Colony at
Laguna Beach in 2002 and renamed it. In March, the partnership
acquired the 80-acre Aliso Creek Inn and Golf Course and on April 1,
escrow closed on the 228.5-acre hillside parcel known as Driftwood
Estates.
Spadework had been done on all three properties when the
partnership made the deals.
Athens Group had already reached agreement with the city on almost
every detail of the entitlements for the redevelopment the oceanfront
mobile home park when the partners bought it for $190 million.
The inn, restaurant, golf course and pro shop package on Aliso
Creek was bought from the Brown Family, which had owned it since the
1950s. Developer Steve Vliss had spent years negotiating an agreement
for the Driftwood property, 218 acres of which he offered to donate
to the city as open space in perpetuity. However, Vliss only had
options on the property, not the deed.
Just how the two recent acquisitions will affect the South Laguna
landscape is unknown.
“We don’t really know exactly what we will be doing until we have
evaluated the land, but we are very excited,” Clarke said Tuesday.
“Once we have plans, we will announce them.”
Her comment echoed what she said in February when the Aliso Creek
deal was made public in a Coastline Pilot story published before
escrow closed.
The partnership could keep Aliso Creek the same, do some minor
tinkering or a major overhaul and proceed with the Driftwood project
as approved by the City Council or scrap the whole thing and start
from scratch.
City approvals are good for two years, which means the new
Driftwood owner has about 18 months left to decide if they want to go
forward with the approved project.
“If they complied with all the conditions of approval and reached
an agreement with the adjacent property owner for access, they could
immediately take the project to the [California] Coastal Commission
for a coastal development plan and local coastal plan amendment and
then submit a tract map to the city,” said John Montgomery, director
of Community Development Department.
Councilwoman Toni Iseman, who voted against the project, sits on
the commission.
Developer Vliss obtained city approval in October 2003 for 11
homes with 35% maximum lot coverage, which allowed 6,300 square feet
on a single story or 12,600 square feet on two stories, excluding
garages.
The project was scaled down 15 homes recommended the previous
February by the Planning Commission. Vliss spent the interim months
in negotiations with protesting neighbors, proposed and chaired by
Councilman Steve Dicterow.
The reduction in homes from the original 19 Vliss had envisioned
to the 11 finally approved prompted him to appeal to the trust that
administered the property for an adjustment in the price. Vliss
announced in January that he had put the project on hold while
trustee Ken Cummins, who expressed great respect for Vliss, explored
options mandated by his fiduciary responsibility, but hoped
ultimately to be the developer.
“I spent almost four years getting my project approved by the
city,” Vliss said at the time. “It would be a reasonable conclusion
that it would already have been underway if the council had approved
the project when it was recommend by the Planning Commission.”
Vliss was traveling this week and unavailable for comments at
press time.
Most of the opposition to Vliss’ project came from the neighbors
below the proposed development. Property owners above Driftwood
Estates supported it because of the donation of open space in
perpetuity.
“We’re remaining watchful about anything proposed for the
beautiful Hobo/Aliso Ridge,” said project opponent Penny Elia. “I
have spoken with Bill Claypoole and he has promised open
communications.”
Claypoole is the Montage vice president of technical services and
often its spokesman at council meetings.
“When Driftwood came out of Planning Commission, it looked like a
win-win project all around,” said Commissioner Anne Johnson. “It was
a modest development for the size of the parcel, with improved
hydrology and more than 200 acres of open space dedicated to the
city.
“The commission had held more than 10 public hearings and made two
trips to the site as well as countless individual trips with the
architect, environmentalists and neighbors both for and against the
project.”
Vliss declined in January to discuss how much the project had cost
him, but architects, geologists, hydrologists, environmental impact
reports and attorneys don’t come cheap for a project of the magnitude
he proposed, even with a reduced number of units.
All in a lost cause.
The city could be the loser in terms of the open space Vliss
promised the city.
“I think it would be a tremendous blow to the city to lose 218
acres of open space,” Kinsman said. “I hope we will receive that kind
of offer again.”
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