Pacific City decision on hold
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Jenny Marder
A decision on the 31-acre Pacific City development stalled in the
Planning Commission Tuesday night.
Lengthy discussions on affordable housing, parking, construction,
storm water runoff and cleanup of the land dragged on into early
morning hours and commissioners voted to continue the hearing to a
special meeting on May 5.
Plans for Pacific City, which would stretch along the coast and be
bordered by Atlanta Avenue, Huntington and First streets, call for
516 homes, a luxury hotel, shops, restaurants and offices.
“It’s a huge project and it is complicated,” Planning Commissioner
Tom Livengood said. “The general public has done an excellent job and
has brought out issues. The Planning Commission sincerely wants to
make sure we address those and the way to do that is through
conditions and actions.”
Officials from the Robert Mayer Corp., which owns the Hyatt
Regency Huntington Beach Resort & Spa and the Hilton Waterfront Beach
Resort that sit next to where Pacific City is slated to be built,
have said that if the Planning Commission approves the project, they
will appeal it to the City Council.
The project lacks the necessary on-site parking, and fails to
adequately address traffic impacts or bacteria from storm water
runoff, Robert Mayer Corp. President Steve Bone has said.
The commission voted Tuesday night to change the affordable
housing requirements for Makar Properties.
To increase affordable housing in the city, the commission gave
developers an additional option last night. Instead of the original
requirement to build 39 affordable housing units on site and 39 off
site, developer Makar Properties now has the option to build 178
affordable units off site instead.
“The object is to create as much affordable housing as you can and
as affordable as you can,” Planning Commission Chairman Ron Davis
said.
The commission also voted in favor of the storm water runoff
treatment system that Makar Properties has proposed.
Storm water runoff from the Pacific City project would be filtered
through a treatment system on site. From there it would flow into
storm drains and then into the ocean. It would not be treated for
bacteria.
The Planning Commission also agreed that no grading or
construction could begin until a full cleanup of the land is
completed.
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