Chronic Cantina cleared for Triangle Square The...
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Chronic Cantina cleared for Triangle Square
The Costa Mesa planning commission voted, 4-1, Monday to give
Chronic Cantina a permit allowing the restaurant to serve alcohol
after 11 p.m.
Keith Scheinberg of Chronic Cantina said the vote lets the
restaurant get ready for Triangle Square’s upper level.
“That was our last hurdle, so we’re golden,” Scheinberg said.
In July, planning department staffers recommended that planning
commissioners vote against the restaurant’s permit. Planners
concluded there was not enough parking at Triangle Square for a
sit-down restaurant.
That recommendation was changed Sept. 1 after Triangle Square
managers submitted a new leasing plan to Costa Mesa officials that
called for the vacant Niketown space to be leased to a furniture
store.
Furniture stores have lower parking requirements than other shops.
The only commissioner to vote against the permit was commission
chair Bill Perkins. Perkins said he hopes Chronic Cantina succeeds at
Triangle Square, but that he had concerns related to the restaurant’s
proximity to Sutra Lounge, a nightclub where Perkins said he has
observed safety issues.
Scheinberg said he is hoping Chronic Cantina will be open for
business in December.
Speaker to discuss life in O.C.’s early days
Historian, artist and storyteller Yolanda Morelos Alvarez is the
keynote speaker at an annual open house Saturday held at the Diego
Sepulveda Adobe at Estancia Park, 1900 W. Adams St., in Costa Mesa.
At the event, sponsored by the Costa Mesa Historical Society,
Alvarez will tell stories about her grandparents’ lives in Orange
County decades ago. They lived in o7coloniasf7, or colonies of
Mexican American residents, that were scattered throughout the
county.
The event begins at 1 p.m. Admission is free. Call the historical
society at (949) 631-5918 for more information.
Costa Mesa company donates to storm victims
Costa Mesa’s Von Hemert Interiors has sent a shipment of bedroom
supplies to Houston to help families who were displaced by Hurricane
Katrina.
The items include bed frames, mattresses, tables, armoires,
chairs, lamps and bedding ensembles. Company co-owner Carrie von
Hemert said the furniture was originally scheduled to be put on
consignment, but co-owner Mickey von Hemert, Carrie’s brother, had a
different idea.
“We wanted to do something to help the families who have had
everything taken away,” said Carrie von Hemert, whose furniture and
interior design company has been family run for four generations.
The truck was scheduled to arrive at the West Houston Assistance
League, a national charity organization that helps needy families,
late last week.
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