Downtown businesses wary of the Strand
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Dave Brooks
Downtown business owners are starting to get nervous about the
impending construction of the Strand -- not that it will steal
business but that it could mean a loss of delivery space and employee
parking.
Contractors working on the 225,000-square-foot shopping center in
Downtown Huntington Beach have presented the Planning Department with
a report detailing the construction impacts and contend the merchants
will be taken care of.
The report is being reviewed by the Public Works Department and
should be available to the public in July.
An early concern is the project’s effect on businesses around the
100 block of Main Street, said Joe Claudio, associate civil engineer
for the Public Works Department.
“They haven’t really given us any specifics about how they plan to
deal with deliveries and employee parking [in the area,]” he said.
The Strand will be bordered by Main Street, Walnut Avenue, Pacific
Coast Highway and 6th Street, and will include a 149-room Residence
Inn and a shopping center with businesses like Pacific Sunwear,
Johnny Rockets and Ben & Jerry’s.
Main Street business-owner Joseph Cornman of Sunshine clothing
said he was concerned that the project, which begins in the lot
behind his store, will block access to his delivery truck.
“The whole business is that the store and my truck work together,”
he said. “Without it, I’m finished. The ball is in their court now.”
Claudio is recommending the contractor appoint a community liaison
to work with the business owners and ensure they can access their
vehicles.
The first phase of the project involves tearing up the delivery
alley to lay pipes and wiring and could force deliveries to go
through businesses’ Main Street entrance, slowing traffic on the
street.
The second phase will see the excavation of the rear public
parking lot, followed by construction of the buildings. The project
is set to be completed in December 2005.
Carla Wynia, general contractor for the Strand, said that in the
end, developers plan to accommodate Main Street vendors.
“We’ve contacted all the patrons to let them know that the project
is going forward and they would be getting detailed information
[about construction issues],” she said.
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