Greenlight backs Hyatt’s renovation
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Paul Clinton
Leaders of the Greenlight movement praised the Hyatt Newporter’s
restoration as an ideal example of restrained growth.
Hotel managers, during their process, won’t be required to seek a
public vote on the plan because it doesn’t significantly expand the
hotel.
“That’s the kind of development that Greenlight supports,” said
Phil Arst, the Greenlight spokesman, “upgrading older areas of the
city, rather than adding density.”
The Greenlight initiative, passed in 2000, requires a public vote
for large-scale development that either exceeds certain size
thresholds or needs an amendment to the city’s general plan.
The Hyatt Newporter project does not trigger any of those
thresholds, which include a project that adds more than 100
“peak-hour” vehicle trips, more than 100 new dwelling units or other
statistical criteria.
“As it stands today, to renovate the property we have no
responsibility to the Greenlight Initiative,” General Manager Bruce
Brainerd said. “It has no impact.”
The Hyatt Newporter’s new management, Sunstone Hotel Investors,
says it plans to spend $14 million to renovate the oldest hotel in
the city. Sunshine is managing for Westbrook Hotel Partners IV, which
bought the hotel in December from Wyndham International Inc.
The Newporter Inn, as it was once known, was built in 1962.
Sunstone has pledged a broad-brush renovation that would revamp
the hotel’s 403 guest rooms, meeting rooms, public areas, restaurant
and sports bar.
Hotel mangers say they need to upgrade the hotel to keep up with
the competition. The Balboa Bay Club is readying its new hotel, set
to open in May, and the Costa Mesa Hilton has completed a major
overhaul.
Work would begin in September and wrap up by next summer.
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