Neighbors’ views getting stuck in a jut
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Alicia Robinson
Like a much slower sort of tide, a line of homes is beginning to
advance along the bluffs in Corona del Mar.
Ocean Boulevard homeowner Doug Circle’s house will be among them,
but it won’t be the first. Circle won approval from the Newport Beach
City Council Tuesday to tear down his existing house and build a
bigger one that extends slightly beyond the city’s height limit.
The Planning Commission in January approved the bigger home on the
condition that two of its decks be shortened, so they don’t project
as far out from the bluff. Neighbor Lynne Butterfield appealed to the
City Council, arguing that the new house would spoil the public’s
views from Inspiration Point and Corona del Mar State Beach as well
as her own view because one deck would project about eight feet
beyond adjacent decks.
The city has regulations on how far back from a property line a
building must sit and how tall it can be, but not how far out it can
jut from a sloped property like those on Ocean Boulevard.
The existing bluff-side homes along that stretch of Ocean
Boulevard roughly line up with one another, and Butterfield wanted to
keep it that way.
“We have a significant invasion of privacy [with the proposed
deck],” said Tom Allen, who represented Butterfield at Tuesday’s
council meeting. “This is a significant departure from what’s there
now.”
The council’s dilemma was its dual role as a steward of the
environmentally sensitive bluffs and a protector of residents’
property rights. The case was a complicated one including all sorts
of factors. For example, council members were wary of setting a
precedent for projecting buildings by approving Circle’s plans, but
they can’t deny a homeowner a building permit to protect someone
else’s private view.
“What’s happening is we’re seeing a new line of development being
established and people who don’t like the new line asking [the
council] to assist them in their resistance,” said attorney Sherman
Stacey, who represented Circle.
The city is working on a clearly defined policy on how far out
buildings can project from the bluffs, but the policy is part of a
plan awaiting approval from the Coastal Commission, a process that
could take at least a year. Council members debated whether they
should set new rules, or if the existing height limit is enough. They
ultimately avoided making any sweeping new policies, which led some
people to expect more homeowners to mansionize their bluff-side
houses.
“Every house has to be bigger and more in-your-face than the one
before,” resident Robert Walchli told the council. “You’ve refused in
the past to take responsible action to protect the [public’s] views,
and this is the result.”
Before the new home can be built, it must be approved by the
Coastal Commission, which has a reputation for being rigid when it
comes to coastal development but has recently approved two other
homes along the same bluff that will jut out farther than Circle’s.
The city already had approved those homes.
“What’s really interesting is that the line of development has
changed and people aren’t seeing that, and they aren’t willing to
accept that,” said Brion Jeannette, the architect who designed
Circle’s new home.
When it came time to vote, council members at first were all over
the map. They ended up approving Circle’s plans with a minor change,
but some were still scratching their heads over which direction the
city should go on the bluffs issue.
“I don’t know how you deal with this situation, quite frankly,”
Mayor Steve Bromberg said. “We do have the [height] rule, but we
don’t all agree on what the rule should be or what it should do....
The question is, do we want to have a separate rule just for the
bluffs.”
* ALICIA ROBINSON covers government and politics. She may be
reached at (714) 966-4626 or by e-mail at alicia.robinson
@latimes.com.
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