Builders say land scarce
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Andrew Edwards
Newport-Mesa is running out of room.
With some exceptions, such as Newport Coast and north Costa Mesa,
developers are almost out of space to build new neighborhoods.
However, that doesn’t mean builders plan to leave Newport-Mesa alone.
Homebuilders at Newport Beach-based John Laing Homes are eyeing
Costa Mesa’s Westside for future “infill” projects. Infill is a term
used to describe new building in the middle of older neighborhoods.
“There are huge opportunities for it in Costa Mesa,” said Dan
Flynn, vice president of land acquisition for John Laing Homes.
“Westside’s all built out, but there are going to be many, many new
opportunities for housing.”
John Laing Homes has a full-time employee whose job is to look for
land in Costa Mesa, Flynn said. In March, the Costa Mesa City Council
approved a revitalization plan for the Westside, allowing industrial
areas to be rezoned for live-work buildings, lofts, condominiums or
clustered homes. The council went beyond the rezoning plan
recommended by a citizen’s committee that attempted to balance the
interests of industrialists with those seeking more homes on the
Westside.
Costa Mesa officials may actively seek developers to build homes
in the Westside this fall, assistant development services director
Mike Robinson said, noting he expects the City Council to approve the
zoning amendments and ordinances necessary for new homes around
October or November.
When home construction starts on the Westside, Robinson said
builders will be challenged by the difficulties of adding residences
to a historically industrial area.
Developers likely will have to take steps to improve landscaping
and build sound walls to insulate new neighborhoods from the
surrounding area.
“The first couple through the gate are going to be a tough fit,”
Robinson said.
An exception to the lack of available land can be found in north
Costa Mesa. Sakioka Farms owns property near Sunflower Avenue and
Sakioka Drive, where about 1,400 dwelling units can be built, Costa
Mesa principal planner Kimberly Brandt said.
Other areas in Costa Mesa that Brandt listed as available for
residential construction include land on Harbor Boulevard near the
Fairview Developmental Center, a lot on 23rd Street and Orange Avenue
and the site of the former Daily Pilot offices on West Bay Street.
Costa Mesa developers at C.J. Segerstrom & Sons are down to a
single parcel of land where housing would be feasible, company
spokesman Paul Freeman said.
“I think the only one, it’s not properly zoned for it, but there
is the Mesa Verde parcel,” Freeman said. “We’re looking at a range of
possibilities, including housing.”
That piece of land was the site of the old Kona Lanes, which
closed in May 2003.
Newport Beach similarly is tight on land for new homes.
“We’ve been in a kind of built-out state for kind of a while now,”
senior planner Patrick Alford said. “There are a few parcels here and
there.”
The mixed-use Cannery Lofts project on the Balboa Peninsula is an
example of a completed infill project in Newport Beach, Alford said.
Plans for a separate infill proposal to tear down a Bayside Drive
apartment complex and replace the building with 17 single-family homes are still being reviewed.
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