Getting the ‘Triangle’ all squared away
Regarding the Pilot’s question about what can be done to improve
business at Triangle Square, the short answer to the question is:
Nothing. At least that’s the case unless we get some leaders in this
city who understand demographics and retail design and a few other
factors, and who can think bigger thoughts than how to fix a pothole
here and there.
Triangle Square is an example of what happens when you have a
group of know-nothings and people with narrow agendas trying to
decide how to redevelop an area.
This is important to remember, because the city of Costa Mesa is
doing the same thing all over again with plans to fix the broken
Westside.
Here, in a nutshell, is what’s wrong with Triangle Square from a
retail standpoint and what can be done in a big-vision sense:
1. It is designed wrong. Supermarkets don’t work underground in
our climate, and people prefer not to park in a dark, dank,
underground, claustrophobic garage. Notwithstanding this, however, if
some major changes are made to the area outside Triangle Square,
these inherent flaws might be outweighed, and it might be saved as a
retail location.
2. Because the Costa Mesa (55) Freeway dumps massive beach-bound
traffic near Triangle Square, local customers try to avoid the area.
The solution to this problem is to dig the 55 trench all the way down
to 15th Street and dump the nonlocal traffic there. Then, cap over
the trench and make the whole downtown area a pedestrian-friendly
shopping/arts area with Triangle Square as the centerpiece. At
present, Triangle Square has a foreboding castle look and feel to it.
It needs to have an open and breezy look and feel to work with a
capped-over trench.
3. Move forward with building expensive homes to replace some of
the industrial buildings on the Westside bluffs. This will increase
the income demographic in the main trade area of Triangle Square and
will attract more merchants. This is also the reason that I, alone,
of most of the so-called Westside improvers, supported 1901 Newport.
It will bring people to the area who can walk to the stores.
If the above steps aren’t taken, Triangle Square will be doomed as
a retail location, and the city should seriously consider taking it
over and turning it into a new City Hall. As an alternative, Triangle
Square could be taken over by a college and turned into classrooms.
The same know-nothing planning that was behind the development of
Triangle Square was once again in play in the Community Redevelopment
Action Committee and Westside Revitalization Oversight Committee --
committees empowered by the city of Costa Mesa to come up with plans
to fix the Westside.
What came out of this dynamic is an oversight committee report
that is now in the hands of the Redevelopment Agency of the city (the
City Council wearing different hats) that is mostly about making some
minor changes to the Westside instead of finally correcting the major
problem, which is that there is simply too much industrial zoning to
ever allow the demographics to rise and make the area nice.
The city of Costa Mesa set out to design a horse by consensus and
ended up with a camel called Triangle Square, and it’s about to do
the same thing with the Westside.
Unless we have a sea change in the thinking in this city, a couple
of years from now, the Pilot will be asking what went wrong with the
plans to fix the Westside, just as it is now asking what went wrong
with Triangle Square.
M. H. MILLARD
Costa Mesa
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