New banquet hall squeaks by Surf City council
Tariq Malik
HUNTINGTON BEACH -- A new banquet hall will set up shop in a vacant
building at Peter’s Landing and Marina despite protests by some
neighborhood residents who see the place as a blight.
The Ocean Room, a waterfront wedding and banquet hall proposed for
16360 Pacific Coast Highway, in the Peter’s Landing shopping area, slid
past the City Council with a narrow 4-3 vote Monday. Council members Tom
Harman, Dave Sullivan and Pam Julien, who is running for reelection,
objected.
Residents from the Bayfront and Broadmoor communities adjacent to the
vacant, two-story building the Ocean Room wants to call home pleaded with
council members about noise levels, loitering and drunkenness that would
accompany the banquet hall and that it would lower their standard of
living and property values.
“We don’t want our homes invaded by the noise and things that will
come out of this business,” said Russel Vaughan, president of the Bayport
Homeowners’ Assn. “If any of you want to, you can buy my place if this
goes through. . . . I just wouldn’t want to stay there anymore.”
Ocean Room officials assured residents that the business generated at
the banquet hall, which would serve alcohol and provide live
entertainment at weddings, bar mitzvahs and other gatherings, would not
reach the level expected by nearby residents.
“Our plan for the Ocean Room is an upscale use that will not resemble
a bar, a nightclub or a party hall,” said Geoffrey Johnson, who plans to
run the business. “We’ve worked with the residents in the community,
reduced our occupancy load down to 300 people, and addressed the noise
and smoking concerns.”
Some of the concessions the business has agreed to are buffer walls
and window seals to curb high noise levels, tightly regulated operating
hours and alcohol sales, and on-site security, he said.
In June, the Planning Commission rejected the Ocean Room proposal,
citing noise, parking and compatibility with surrounding businesses as
its cause for denial. Johnson appealed the decision to the council, and
most of the council members saw the project’s situation differently.
“This is a type of inverse condemnation,” Councilman Ralph Bauer said.
“Here is a business that has followed all the rules, and we deny them the
chance to operate.”
Some council members said the large amount of restrictions -- about 60
rules that must be followed to maintain operation -- is uncommon, but
because Johnson has agreed to proceed with them and bear the brunt of any
complaints from homeowners, they should be able to move forward.
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