Barbara Diamond The proposed expansion of St....
Barbara Diamond
The proposed expansion of St. Catherine of Siena Church is tearing up
the neighborhood even before construction starts. Opponents say they are
fighting to keep their view and pathway access while church officials are
crying foul over delays in approving the project.
The Design Review Board has already held two hearings on the St.
Catherine expansion, Feb. 28 and April 18. A third hearing is scheduled
for May 9.
“Members of the board are being lobbied by both sides,” said board
member Steven Kawaratani. “The church is struggling to be a good neighbor
and still build the project it wants and the neighbors are struggling to
be good neighbors and still retain views, airflow and some street
parking.”
The proposed project, which includes a three-story addition, doubles
the original square footage of the church, but does not make provisions
for off-street parking. The church also proposes dense landscaping on the
rear of the property and closure of a pathway that uphill neighbors use
as shortcut down to town. Kawarantani said the project is approvable. He
declined to comment on specific issues until the next public meeting on
the project.
Revisions to the original proposal, made after the Feb. 28 meeting,
lowered the addition’s ridge line by a half foot, reduced square footage
and pushed back the project from the street. A newly revised plan was
filed Wednesday. No new staking plan was included.
Church officials and supporters said the $3.5 million renovation is
necessary to make the church and grounds earthquake-proof, more usable
and beautiful for neighbors and church members. They claim the city is
not treating the project fairly and that comments made at the April 18
meeting were unseemly.
“I was in a small boil,” said the Rev. Eamon O’Gorman, church pastor.
Opponents of the submitted project said at the April 18 meeting that
despite the revisions the addition was still too massive for the
neighborhood, the three-story addition too high and runoff from the
church property would cause flooding downhill.
“If you want free water, come up and look at Temple Terrace,” said
resident Ervin Watkins.
The design review board has recommended that the church work with city
staff on a drainage plan.
In a letter to the city dated April 23, O’Gorman wrote that the church
had complied, at some cost, with all the recommendations made by the
board at the Feb. 28 meeting, but were presented April 18 with a new list
of requirements, some of them he called unreasonable.
“For some reason not immediately recognized, you made our application
a ‘catholic’ issue,” O’Gorman wrote. “The scope and details of your
recent demands will be covered in a future letter to the mayor and the
City Council from our legal counsel.”
O’Gorman also took exception to the characterization by some board
members that the addition was for business.
It was the height and mass of the proposed project, the drainage uses
planned for the addition and the location of a transformer near the
street that neighbor Carol Reynolds spoke about at the meeting.
Neighbor Linda Leahy said she shared neighborhood concerns about the
location of a transformer. O’Gorman said Tuesday that the church’s
architect is working with Edison to resolve neighbors’ concerns about the
transformer.
In all, 11 residents spoke against the project at the April 18
meeting. There was no public testimony in favor of the project.
Some downhill neighbors fear that increased church activity will
exacerbate the traffic problem, which they say clogs Temple Terrace
during church services.
Curb modifications and re-striping is expected to result in a gain of
six or eight parking spaces on the street.
Neighbors above the project had some different concerns about the
project.
The Temple Hills Neighborhood Assn., which represents about 750
households, opposed the closure of the pathway on the south side of the
property and requested revisions in the proposed landscaping that would
impact views.
Board members Eve Plumb, Suzanne Morrison and Kawaratani supported the
church’s right to close the pathway at the first hearing in February. In
the past the city required South Coast Medical Center to retain a public
pedestrian pathway through its property as a condition of approval for
the cancer center project.
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