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Christine Carrillo
An Army air base turned fairgrounds, the site of Indian Pow Wows and
Scottish Festivals, and host to numerous gun and computer shows over
the years, the Orange County Fair and Exposition Center in Costa Mesa
has played a varied role in the city’s 50-year history.
The fairgrounds lured flocks of residents from surrounding cities
and counties into Costa Mesa’s city limits to attend the annual
Orange County Fair that found a permanent home there in 1950.
“I would like to the think the fair is part of the community
development,” said Becky Bailey-Findley, general manager and chief
executive for the center. “I think when you talk about the people who
work at the fair and kind of embody the spirit of the fair, many of
them are residents, but even if some of us don’t live here, we still
see it as a second home, and it’s because of the years of interaction
with the community.”
It still acts as bartering central on the weekends, giving
shoppers across Southern California, and sometimes beyond, an outdoor
marketplace for nearly anything under the sun.
“I think we’ve long been known as a great place for the family to
spend the day. ... We’re almost like an outdoor mall with a heavy
emphasis on fun,” said Jeff Teller, president of the Orange County
Marketplace, which began in 1969. “We’ve had a great relationship
with the city for a number of years. ... We’re kind of an
institution.”
While the fairgrounds has managed to maintain a positive fiscal
effect on the city with such multimillion dollar events as the fair
and the marketplace, it has also created its share of controversy.
At one time, the fairgrounds sparked huge debate over the concert
noise that penetrated through residential neighborhoods in the
amphitheater’s vicinity. That controversy, which resulted in the
closure of the Pacific Amphitheater in 1995, may rear its head once
again when the amphitheater reopens this summer during the fair.
For the most part, whether positive or negative, the fairgrounds
have had quite an effect on the city, as a whole.
“The old-fashioned country fair and venues, livestock shows and
rodeos have really been a very big part of Costa Mesa, keeping its
hometown feel as opposed to a metropolitan feel,” said Ed Fawcett,
president of the Costa Mesa Chamber of Commerce. “Costa Mesa revolves
around the fair more than the fair revolves around it. It has been
very instrumental in the ... [formation] of the city. I think the
fairgrounds will be here for a long time to come.”
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