Corona del Mar anything but sleepy
Alicia Robinson
Taking a stroll around Corona del Mar’s business district is a much
different affair today than it was 30 or 40 years ago.
For many years, it didn’t even have a Starbucks.
“It was a pretty sleepy beach town. It was starting to become a
primary residence area, but there was a lot of the cottages and
weekend homes of people that lived up in L.A.,” said Mark Schulein,
president of Crown Ace Hardware. “I remember Fashion Island was a
glorified strip mall of sorts.”
How times have changed. Schulein’s family took over the Corona del
Mar hardware store about 30 years ago, after his father bought the
building as an investment, and today the Schuleins have 11 stores
around Orange County.
The strip of Coast Highway that makes up the village’s business
improvement district has experienced similar prosperity. A number of
interior-design shops have popped up along with the influx of wealthy
residents to the village and the new homes in adjacent Newport Coast.
You can get a quick lunch at Baja Fresh or a white tablecloth dinner
at the Five Crowns.
“It’s a real reflection of the community that lives here, and
there is a lot of basic retail, high-end services and boutique shops
with many destination restaurants,” said Chip Stassel, a State Farm
insurance agent and president of the Corona del Mar Chamber of
Commerce. “We even have our own assisted-living center.”
Alongside older, service-oriented businesses like the hardware
store and real estate offices are unique shops such as the
Hearthstone, which sells fireplaces and accessories, and clothing and
jewelry boutiques.
Today’s thriving business district didn’t come without some pain.
Some of the older businesses were squeezed out in the late 1960s by
major development at Fashion Island, and some thought Corona del Mar
would disappear, said Walt Boice, an associate at commercial real
estate firm Realonomics Corp.
“We all of a sudden had this huge increase in commercial space and
we didn’t have enough people [to support it],” he said. “A good part
of the town was gas stations, banks and restaurants.”
But the village has been nothing if not adaptable, and as
businesses go, they are replaced, in some cases by success stories
like Claudia Agudelo’s.
After immigrating here from Colombia as a 23-year-old, Agudelo
took some classes at a community college and learned to design
jewelry, which she sold on the streets of Los Angeles.
She began selling at craft shows and finally got a spot at the
Orange County Market Place in Costa Mesa. From there, it wasn’t long
until she got a trunk show at Nordstrom, and soon she needed her own
shop.
She’s owned EXEX Jewelry in Corona del Mar for five years now, and
she loves it there. In honor of the Centennial, Agudelo designed
jewelry depicting the flowers after which the village streets are
named.
“I think Corona del Mar has so much potential,” Agudelo said.
“It’s actually a walking city. You can walk to get coffee at
Starbucks; you can walk and get your breakfast at a bagel cafe.”
And the village is about to get more pedestrian-friendly. Once its
stretch of Coast Highway is relinquished to the city of Newport Beach
on Thursday, officials can move ahead with plans to improve the
median and add crosswalks.
While the village will continue to suffer a parking shortage, new
directional signs and other street improvements will go far toward
transforming the business district, Stassel said.
“We’re kind of at the apex of change, celebrating our 100-year
anniversary,” he said. “Corona del Mar is growing up.”
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers business, politics and the environment.
She may be reached at (949) 764-4330 or by e-mail at
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