Paul ClintonWhile local hoteliers debate about how...
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Paul Clinton
While local hoteliers debate about how much business they’ll lose to
a new Huntington Beach resort, one thing seems certain. Newport
Beach, and perhaps Costa Mesa, will see more traffic as a result.
The Hyatt Regency Huntington Beach Resort and Spa, a sprawling
mini-city oriented toward drawing more corporate events, opened in
late January.
“There’s no question our guests will be shopping all over Orange
County,” said Steve Bone, the resort’s affable co-owner. “Our
customers will shop at South Coast Plaza and Fashion Island.”
Newport Beach officials, not surprisingly, aren’t looking forward
to the increased traffic traveling southbound on Pacific Coast
Highway into Newport Beach for the city’s top-flight restaurants,
pleasure harbor or ritzy shopping.
To Mayor Steve Bromberg, Newport Beach gets all of the bad and
none of the good from the new hotel.
“We will lose out on that business, but we will get their
traffic,” Bromberg said. “That is unfortunate.”
Debate has begun over the city’s 2000 approval of the Greenlight
Initiative, which requires a two-thirds voter majority to approve any
new large-scale hotel or other development within the city.
The initiative was passed, essentially, as a response to the
Newport Dunes Waterfront Resort’s earlier plans to add a conference
center.
But Phil Arst, a Greenlight representative, said Bromberg’s
comments about the Hyatt were a “self-defeating statement.”
“The main bulk of that traffic will be in Huntington Beach,” Arst
said. “If that hotel were in Newport Beach, it would be far worse.”
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