Light shed on new fixtures
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Barbara Diamond
South Laguna will have distinctive -- and more costly -- street
lighting fixtures than other parts of town.
The City Council voted 3-2 on May 3 to uphold an April 7 Design
Review Board approval of the copper-clad fixtures, which are not the
fixtures recommended citywide by the Public Works Department.
The street lights are part of a long-awaited overall streetscape
improvement project for the area that includes sidewalks, bus
shelters, medians, new eucalyptus trees and landscaping in the
commercial district on Coast Highway from Catalina Avenue to Circle
Way.
“I appealed this,” City Manager Ken Frank said of the DRB decision
on the lighting fixtures. “We should require what we have required of
everybody else.” Frank said the area should have fixtures owned and
maintained by the utility company, which would save the city money.
The staff-recommended fixtures are from San Diego Gas & Electric
stock. The company will not maintain non-stock fixtures.
SDG & E serves South Laguna. The rest of Laguna is served by
Edison, which offered similar fixtures for projects in other areas in
town, and maintains them.
“The purpose of the lights is to give distinctive character to the
South Laguna commercial area,” said former Mayor Ann Christoph, who
lives and owns a business in South Laguna. “SDG& E [stock] does not
fit the bill. One is unattractive and the others shine in people’s
homes.”
The lighting fixture proposal came out of a subcommittee that was
asked by the DRB to work on the project.
The 20 Teka fixtures have tapered aluminum poles with stone bases
and copper “top hats” that direct light downward and will acquire an
attractive patina, city-hired landscape consultant Jim Docksteder
said.
Public Works director Steve May said stock SDG&E; fixtures could be
shaded.
South Laguna Civic Association member Greg O’Loughlin said
Victorian-style fixtures -- used in other parts of town -- do not fit
the character of South Laguna.
“The [preferred] lamps give a ‘there’ there,” said Driftwood Drive
resident Jean N. Bernstein.
The estimated cost to install and own the non-stock fixtures is
$10,815 per fixture, compared to $7,700 per fixture installed and
maintained by SDG& E.
“What I most admire about small communities in Europe is that they
have a unique character, which creates collective memory and
consciousness that I think is positive and you can’t put a price on
that,” said Councilman Steven Dicterow, who upheld the Design Review
Board approval of the pricier fixtures.
Primary costs of street lighting are power, maintenance,
replacement and liability.
Risk cost is inherent in public works asset ownership, although
the cost cannot be readily quantified, according to a report by
Community Development Department Director John Montgomery. Potential
liability would come from pedestrians and motorists who might run
into the light or by some other event that could occur in the
darkness if the lights failed.
Owning the lighting system also obligates the city to maintain it
and replace it if necessary. Some years ago, Victoria Beach decided
it wanted distinguishable lighting fixtures and paid for what the
residents wanted. The fixtures rusted out and now the city has to pay
for replacement.
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