Los Angeles Times

Hollywood towers win officials’ OK

Planning Commission endorses Crossroads project, with 950 new apartments and hotel.

- By David Zahniser

The Los Angeles City Planning Commission voted Thursday to endorse the sprawling project known as Crossroads Hollywood, a campus offering 950 new apartments and a 308-room hotel on or near Sunset Boulevard.

The panel, made up of appointees of Mayor Eric Garcetti, recommende­d the project to the City Council despite warnings that it would flood the neighborho­od with thousands of additional cars and result in the demolition of dozens of rent-controlled apartments.

The $1-billion Crossroads project calls for nine new structures, including a 26story hotel and two residentia­l towers — one at 30 stories, the other 31. It would also add 190,000 square feet of commercial space, including a new movie theater, to the 8.3-acre site.

Opponents said such a huge developmen­t would have serious effects on traffic, historic preservati­on and other neighborho­od issues.

“It’s going to turn Sunset Boulevard into a parking lot,” said Doug Carstens, a lawyer who represents Livable L.A., one of the groups that oppose the project. “They’ve got four major intersecti­ons on Sunset with what they call unavoidabl­e impacts. But they’d be avoidable if they reduced the size of the project.”

Planning officials said Crossroads Hollywood will be in an area served by several bus routes and a Metro Red Line subway station. Because it is so close to so many forms of public transit, and because of the way it is designed, Crossroads Hollywood will result in 36% fewer “vehicle miles traveled” when compared with another developmen­t of the same size, said Kyndra Casper, an attorney for Harridge Developmen­t Group.

Planning Commission­er David Ambroz said Crossroads Hollywood would go up in a part of the city where high-density housing makes sense. He accused the project’s opponents of misusing the California Environmen­tal Quality Act, or CEQA, and said his time had been “wasted” reading through the paperwork that they submitted.

“They once again abuse CEQA to delay and deny people the right to develop

Ambroz said. “It would be nice to sit up here one day when I saw CEQA used to help the environmen­t, as opposed to extort developers.”

Supporters of Crossroads Hollywood say it would create much-needed housing and inject new life into a part of Hollywood in need of revitaliza­tion. They praised Harridge for seeking to preserve some of the buildings on the site, including those that make up Crossroads of the World — which opened in the mid-1930s as an outdoor shopping area and is known for its rotating globe.

Foes of the developmen­t said those preservati­on efforts did not go far enough, arguing that additional structures should have been protected. They also criticized Harridge for seeking to demolish 82 rent-controlled apartments on the site, saying that such a move would accelerate gentrifica­tion in Hollywood.

“We’re not a fan of the Disneyfica­tion of Sunset,” said Ged Kenslea, spokesman for the AIDS Healthcare Foundation, which opposes the Crossroads project. “They’re destroying one community to create another community.”

Kenslea also called Ambroz’s comments “disrespect­ful” to the public.

Representa­tives of Harridge said their project will set aside 105 apartments for very low-income residents, those who earn up to 50% of the L.A.-Long Beach area’s income. The company also agreed to allow the roughly 40 people who still live on the site to move into Crossroads Hollywood once it is completed — at nearly the same rent they are paying now, Casper said.

Some commission­ers, concerned about the loss of rent-controlled units, pushed unsuccessf­ully for Harridge to increase the number of subsidized apartprope­rty,” ments on the site. But commission President Samantha Millman opposed that move, saying the developer had gone a long way to make sure “every single resident of this project is taken care of.”

Commission­er Karen Mack commended Harridge for working closely with the surroundin­g community. But she acknowledg­ed lingering worries about traffic congestion that would acmedian company the project.

Angelenos, she said, are dreaming of a future when the city will have several new rail lines, “where we don’t have to get in a car and we can hop on the Metro.”

“In the meantime,” she said, “you’re sitting in traffic. And you hate living in L.A. at that moment.”

 ?? Owings & Merrill LLP ?? CROSSROADS HOLLYWOOD, shown in an artist’s rendering, calls for nine new structures, including a 26-story hotel and two residentia­l towers, on 8.3 acres.
Owings & Merrill LLP CROSSROADS HOLLYWOOD, shown in an artist’s rendering, calls for nine new structures, including a 26-story hotel and two residentia­l towers, on 8.3 acres.

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