Town Center still unsettled
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Jennifer Kho
COSTA MESA -- Instead of the long-awaited end to a Town Center project
dispute, Monday’s City Council meeting could result in an 18-month
postponement.
Commonwealth Partners, one of the project’s developers, has requested
the continuance, while the city’s staff is recommending that the council
postpone a decision on the request until staff members can evaluate it,
Assistant City Atty. Tom Wood said Thursday.
“They want that time to have the Theater Arts District plan be drafted
and approved and to pursue their final master plan for their site,” he
said. “We’ll have to wait and see what the council does before we know
where we’re going.”
The council will review the request Monday.
Phil Schwartze, spokesman for Commonwealth, said the developer has
agreed to maintain the California Scenario sculpture garden for 50 years,
but the company disagrees with other parts of its development agreement
with the city.
The council approved requirements that the developer provide money and
parking for the Theater Arts District. However, a plan for the district
has yet to be drafted, and Commonwealth said it can’t agree to an unknown
amount of money and parking.
“The wording has no cap on the amount we might be asked to spend on
the TAD plan,” Schwartze said. “It says we will spend whatever money that
is. Is it $10,000? $10 million? I don’t know and no one else does,
either, because the study hasn’t been done.
“We’re also concerned about the amount of parking because we have
leases with existing tenants that guarantee a certain number of parking
spaces, and we don’t want to be in the position of violating the leases,”
Schwartze continued. “If we can just agree on fixed numbers, we can make
those issues go away.”
The developer had previously suggested a cap of $1.3 million as its
contribution for the Theater Arts District plan.
The request for a continuance had not been released by press time, and
council members, who had not yet seen the letter, declined to comment.
The Town Center project, a collaboration between Commonwealth, the
Orange County Performing Arts Center and South Coast Partners -- the
owner of South Coast Plaza -- seeks to transform South Coast Metro into a
pedestrian-oriented cultural arts district bordered by Bristol Street,
Sunflower Avenue, Avenue of the Arts and the San Diego Freeway.
The other parts of the project were approved earlier this year, but
Commonwealth’s portion has constantly been delayed largely because of a
disagreement about the length of time the developer would be required to
maintain Isamu Noguchi’s California Scenario sculpture garden and how
much public parking it would have to provide for the garden.
After months of intense negotiations -- starting with the council
requesting maintenance for 25 years and then “in perpetuity” -- the
council gave preliminary approval May 21 to an agreement requiring the
developer to maintain the garden for 50 years.
The developer is already prohibited from destroying the garden but is
not required to maintain it.
Although Commonwealth has said it has no interest in developing over
the garden, some residents, art experts and Councilwoman Linda Dixon have
spoken adamantly in favor of requiring protection for the garden forever.
The rest of Commonwealth’s portion of the project, which includes
office space and restaurants, was scheduled to be reviewed by the council
Monday for preliminary approval while the development agreement was
expected to receive final approval.
Cindy Brenneman, a Costa Mesa resident, said she thinks a long delay
would be a shame.
“I was disappointed when we didn’t get ‘in perpetuity,’ but I was
willing to accept the 50-year agreement and was pretty pleased,” she
said. “So it would be a shame to see the whole thing go away after the
amount of time everybody has put into it. It’s been a lot of work. But if
it does go away, it does and maybe it will come back better.”
FYI
WHAT: Costa Mesa City Council meeting
WHERE: Costa Mesa City Hall, 77 Fair Drive
WHEN: 6:30 p.m. Monday
INFORMATION: (714) 754-5223
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