Underground parking approved
The City Council added underground parking to the Pottery Shack
project but had to subtract a historic building to do it.
A previously approved plan was amended to allow Pottery Shack
owner Joe Hanauer to tear down the E-rated building along the
Glenneyre side of the multi-parcel property at 1212 S. Coast Highway
to double the number of parking spaces on the site to 82.
Hanauer had sought to give away the two-story structure but has
not been able to find a taker.
“Toni [Councilwoman Iseman] and I went to him and asked him to put
in underground parking, perhaps in partnership with the city, but
when we learned how expensive it would be, we said, ‘Let’s not do
that,’” Mayor Elizabeth Pearson-Schneider said. “But he went ahead.
This adds more parking in a neighborhood that desperately needs it.”
The amended plan also included the construction of a new
4,533-square-foot building on the site, re-approved the 53 percent
parking reduction granted in return for the rehabilitation of the
historical buildings on the site, allowed parking in excess of the
project requirements to be leased, and adopted a declaration of
mitigated negative impact and a monitoring plan.
Council action reflected the planning commission, heritage
committee and design review board recommendations. The board approved
the demolition of the Glenneyre Street structure without the optional
90-day wait period.
The council voted unanimously to approve all but the 53% reduction
on parking requirements. Councilwoman Jane Egly opposed the
reduction, which Iseman removed from her motion to approve the
recommended action for a separate vote.
“The E-rated structure is the reason for the reduction,” Pottery
Shack neighbor Tom Girvin said.
“The heritage committee sold out by agreeing to the demolition of
the only historical building left on the site. This is a pet project
of the City Council.”
The council sent the underground proposal to be reviewed by the
planning commission, which voted 3-1 in favor of the amended project.
Commissioner Rob Zur Schmeide did not vote.
Commissioner Norm Grossman said the approval sold the soul of the
city for 33 spaces at a time when a traffic consultant has been hired
to look into parking issues in the neighborhood that residents call
the Village Flatland.
One solution being discussed is restricting nighttime parking to
vehicles with shoppers stickers, issued only to Laguna Beach
residents.
Flatland association members said the Pottery Shack project will
flood their streets with customers and employees.
A condition of the approval of the project was that employees and
customers will be able to park free on the site, but will not be
required to do so.
Those with parking stickers will be able to park on the streets at
night, even if the resident-only parking proposal is approved.
Commission Chair Anne Johnson said any vehicle parked on the site
is one fewer parked in the neighborhood.
Mayor Pro Tem Steven Dicterow, who twice previously voted against
the project, said he was voting for it this time because of the work
done by a task force he co-chairs with Councilwoman Egly on
neighborhood parking problems.
“Parking seems to rule in Laguna Beach,” Iseman said.
The 33 parking spaces approved for leasing will be restored to
public parking if needed, property owner Hanauer said.
Sixty-one conditions are attached to the approval of the Pottery
Shack project, including remodeling of existing buildings.
Conditional-use permits are reviewed annually, and more often if
written complaints are submitted.
If violations are verified, the city can revoke the permit.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.