Planning Commission green lights Koll project
Mathis Winkler
NEWPORT BEACH -- The city’s first Greenlight vote is one step closer
after planning commissioners on Thursday unanimously recommended the
approval of a 250,000-square-foot expansion project at Koll Center.
The commission’s 6-0 vote -- short a vote because Commissioner Anne
Gifford was absent -- is but the first hurdle the project, which includes
a 10-story office building and two parking structures, must leap. Next up
is the City Council, which could take up the matter as early as June 26.
A council approval would launch a citywide vote because the project
falls under Greenlight’s jurisdiction. Approved by voters in November,
the slow-growth initiative requires a special election for any
development that adds more than 40,000 square feet or 100 peak-hour car
trips or dwelling units over what’s allowed in the city’s general plan.
Project developers have already said they would pay for a special
election that could take place as early as this fall.
Planning commissioners said they felt comfortable in moving the
project along.
“We went through this project in detail,” said Commissioner Larry
Tucker, referring to several previous hearings in which he and his
colleagues looked at the project.
While planning commissioners had felt in the past that the Koll
developers had not done enough to deal with traffic increases that could
result from the project, a development agreement between the city and the
developer changed that, Tucker said.
“The applicant has come back and . . . offered to put up a substantial
amount of money,” he said. “I never had a problem with the project. [The
developer] just had to help to remedy its impact.”
On top of about $1.16 million in mandatory traffic and transportation
fees, the developers have agreed to pay $2 million for long-term traffic
improvements, as well as $112,500 to fund a planning study for the area
and $60,000 to build a new fire station.
Tim Strader Sr., one of the partners in the Koll project, said he felt
the expansion would help to alleviate traffic problems in the area around
Jamboree Road and MacArthur Boulevard, where the center is located.
“We believe that this project will be a solution,” he said. “Because
if the project is not approved, the city will not get $2 million to solve
the problem.”
But Barry Eaton, a member of the city’s Environmental Quality Affairs
Committee, pointed out that the Koll development agreement fell short of
a draft agreement between the city and chip-maker Conexant Systems Inc.
Conexant officials have put their 566,000-square-foot expansion
project on hold pending a recovery of the economy. The project would also
require a Greenlight vote.
But planning commissioners said the Koll money would come in a lump
sum rather than installments, as arranged for the Conexant project.
A Conexant offer to give $250,000 toward a fire station also exceeded
their “fair share” of what a new station would cost and rather served as
an additional incentive to approve the agreement, while Koll’s $60,000
represented the right amount, Tucker said.
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