Council allows new houses to replace shops at El Camino
Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- In the absence of any speakers against a plan to convert
the rundown El Camino Shopping Center into single-family houses, the City
Council paved the way Monday for the project to proceed.
“I’ll support this,” Mayor Libby Cowan said. “I think it is the right
thing to do for the community. The shopping center is fully past its
prime.”
The council rezoned the Mesa Del Mar site on El Camino Drive from
neighborhood commercial to medium-density residential, allowing the
owners to build between 19 and 29 homes on the site, which is surrounded
by single-family homes, apartment buildings and an office building.
Developer El Camino Partners LLC has not yet submitted a specific
plan, and the design for the site will depend on new housing development
standards the city is working on.
The council extended a moratorium last month on new, two-story,
single-family developments and second-story additions in all residential
areas in the city while it works on the new housing development codes.
Final designs for the El Camino project will be reviewed by the
Planning Commission and the City Council after the standards are
approved.
The Planning Commission approved the plan Feb. 26 before an audience
that spoke only in favor of the plan.
Since December, neighboring residents, customers and shop owners have
expressed strong opinions for and against the proposed change, after the
council agreed to consider the project during a screening process.
The council decision Monday could be the last word in a heated
neighborhood debate.
The Mesa Del Mar Homeowners Assn. fervently favors the plans, and
representatives spoke in support of the project at the council meeting,
saying it will beautify the neighborhood and make it a safer place.
Supporters have previously submitted a petition to the city.
“I think it only makes sense,” Allan Mansoor of Costa Mesa said. “It
will be a benefit and big improvement.”
Apartment renters and shop owners have petitioned against the project
and have said they rely on the center for food, supplies and laundry
services. They did not speak at any previous city meetings and were
expected to speak Monday. Many are nonnative English speakers and the
city had a translator on hand to accommodate them.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.