Detailed Act V compromise
Barbara Diamond
The devil’s in the details, but the devil has been no match for two
council members on a mission.
Mayor Elizabeth Pearson-Schneider and Councilwoman Toni Iseman
announced Wednesday that they had ironed out the details left
unresolved at a well-prepared and well-received public workshop, held
Jan. 15, on the design of the Village Entrance and the Act V city
maintenance yard and peripheral parking.
“This is a great compromise,” Iseman said.
In the joint press release, Pearson-Schneider said the compromise
worked out by the council subcommittee, on which she served with
Iseman, ended 10 years of planning and battle.
The subcommittee, proposed by Councilwoman Cheryl Kinsman, reached
the agreement much sooner than expected, except by Pearson-Schneider
and Iseman, who optimistically predicted swift resolution of issues
outstanding from the workshop.
“Now we are going to make it happen,” Pearson-Schneider said.
The maintenance yard move and construction at Act V proposed by
the subcommittee would be paid for by the city’s parking fund and the
sale of city-owned North Laguna parcels occupied by the Parks
Division.
Pearson-Schneider has endorsed the idea of floating a revenue bond
funded by parking revenues to pay for the Village Entrance project, a
notion proposed months ago by Iseman at a Laguna Canyon Conservancy
dinner meeting.
A bond requires only a majority vote.
The City Council will be asked to approve the compromise proposal
within the next four to five weeks.
Eight new components were nailed down since the public workshop.
1. Keep approximately 255 parking spaces at Act V for peripheral
parking.
2. Eliminate one building proposed at Act V and the trim the
footprint of the remaining building.
3. Add a second story to the remaining building for offices, an
employee lunchroom and similar uses.
City staff will contact the California Coastal Commission to seek
approval of the second story, working with Iseman, who serves on the
commission, and has agreed to push for the approval. It will be under
the height limit of the Newport Coast Local Coastal Plan, which
regulates development in the unincorporated area outside the city
limits in the canyon.
4. Park all large city vehicles, including busses, at Act V.
Locate vehicle washing equipment and racks at the rear of the parcel.
5. Locate the tram stop at Act V at the top of the hill adjacent
to Highway 133 so that it is visible from the road. Passenger pickup
will be at the front of the parcel.
6 .Design the parking garage at the Village Entrance to mask city
functions on the first level. Those functions include the
parking-meter/sign division; City Hall, Arts Commission and Police
Department storage; Lifeguard operations and storage and Fire
Battalion Chief parking.
7. Access to limited public parking on the first floor of the
garage will be from Forest Avenue.
8. Primary public parking will begin on the mezzanine floor, with
access from Laguna Canyon Road.
“City staff helped us find this solution,” Iseman said. “We are
working to make this a reality as soon as possible.”
Maintenance Yard (Act V) architect Peyo Michael will prepare
preliminary space plans reflecting the changes.
Village Entrance designers Studio One Eleven will be asked to
review the proposed changes to the first floor of the Village
Entrance garage.
The compromise agreement reflects the goals and constituencies of
Iseman and Pearson-Schneider. Both gave up more than they wanted,
including reductions in parking spaces at both sites.
Chamber of Commerce past President Ken Delino publicly announced
that any reduction of parking at the Village Entrance would cost
Pearson-Schneider and Councilman Steven Dicterow in the 2006 election
if they chose to run. Iseman also is up for re-election in 2006.
The original proposal for the Village Entrance included parking
for 650 vehicles and not enough public parking to support the free
tram service at Act V, so dear to Iseman’s heart.
“We are going to increase parking at the Village Entrance and
retain enough spaces at Act V to keep our shuttle system viable,”
said Iseman, an advocate of peripheral parking that keeps vehicles
out of the downtown.
“The more cars we capture in the canyon, the less congestion we
have in town,” she said.
Pearson-Schneider has been an advocate for the Village Entrance
project since she served on the Village Entrance Task Force as a
member of the Planning Commission.
“Business and arts venues are finally going to get the year-round
parking support they need. This is one of the main reasons I ran for
office. I can’t begin to tell you how excited I am.”
The task force, which met for more than a year, supported fewer
than 400 parking spaces at the Village Entrance.
Planning Commissioner Bob Chapman said if the compromise number of
580 spaces was reduced, room might be found on the site for the
city’s proposed Community Center, which he said belongs next to City
Hall, not on Third Street, as proposed.
The compromise, which Pearson-Schneider and Iseman will present to
the council, includes, beside the parking garage, “the vision” of a
park and pedestrian pathway on the north side of Laguna Canyon Creek,
that runs along Laguna Canyon Road, a parking structure pushed
against the hill next City Hall, peripheral parking at Act V, while
minimizing environmental impact of construction on the open space at
that site.
The city is expected to have its plans in front of the Coastal
Commission in June.
* BARBARA DIAMOND is a reporter for the Laguna Beach Coastline
Pilot. She may be reached at (949) 494-4321.
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