New plans for Marinapark ready
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June Casagrande
NEWPORT BEACH -- Plans for a controversial luxury resort at Marinapark
will be filed with the city on Monday in a second attempt to please
American Legion members now on the land, the developer said.
But that hurdle is just the first of several daunting challenges
facing Stephen Sutherland Co. as it pushes for a 156-room luxury resort
to be built at the Balboa Peninsula site.
When and if plans pass muster with the Legionnaires, then the city
must rule on the proposal. The City Council’s blessing would ultimately
throw the decision to the voters in the form of a Greenlight ballot
measure.
“Without the American Legion support, the project goes nowhere,”
Sutherland said.
Plans call for moving the American Legion Post 291 now on the property
at 15th Street to a new facility the developer will build at the opposite
end of the 10-acre lot. The current hall and a sprawling mobile home park
would be replaced with a resort where the rooms average $350 to $400 a
night.
After one look at the original plans, American Legion representatives
sent Sutherland back to the drawing board, insisting on more parking,
more boat slips and a shower and restroom facility for boaters who use
the marina.
City Council members have said they will not support the project
without the Legionnaires’ blessing, but that could be difficult to get.
“If we get everything we’ve asked for, we still may not get membership
to approve it,” said J.T. Tarwater, commander of the American Legion post
that has about 2,150 voting members. With auxiliary members and Sons of
the American Legion, about 3,500 users of the hall would be affected by
the impending move.
Among the Legionnaires’ demands: The 50 parking spaces for the hall
should be brought to 130. Also, Tarwater said, the developer’s plans to
reduce to 20 the current 50 boat slips won’t fly.
On Monday, Sutherland said, he will submit to city planners the
revisions, which give 100 parking spaces to the American Legion.
“That’s double what they have now,” Sutherland emphasized.
He said that the project will be a jewel of the city, with luxurious
amenities for guests and benefits to residents, too, such as improved
beach access and other facilities.
He added that all the buildings will be either one or two stories
high.
But Sutherland will have an uphill battle selling the plan to
community members. At a public forum in July, residents expressed
passionate concerns about almost every aspect of the project.
On Tuesday, City Council members will consider creating a committee to
renegotiate the American Legion’s lease. Tarwater said that before they
will go along with the development project, Legionnaires need the
security of a longer-term commitment that they can keep some place on the
city-owned property where they’ve sat since 1949.
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