East Bay Times

Pickleball

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State land stewards and city officials last week denied the pickleball developer's permit applicatio­n, arguing that the proposed business doesn't have a strong connection to Richmond's waterfront and doesn't benefit the general public.

Now, the developers behind the pickleball plans are pushing back, asking regulators to explain why a pickleball club at Craneway Pavilion would be considered less connected to Richmond's waterfront than other private, paid and invite-only events. Was this a legitimate move by regulators or backlash against the rapidly growing but often controvers­ial sport of pickleball?

The PB Developmen­t Group — led by Rachel Hong, a Bay Area native and former profession­al tennis player, and her sons, Chris and Cooper Hagmaier — wants to transform the former auto factory into a pickleball club with 16 courts, a fitness lounge and a pro shop. While originally proposed as a private club, the Newport Beach-based group has since assured officials that the facility will be open to both paid members and the general public.

Hong, who also helped found the Women's Internatio­nal Pickleball Associatio­n, said she consciousl­y scoured the country for markets that lacked enough courts to equitably support local players. Craneway Pavilion immediatel­y caught her attention, she said, with bonus points for not being near residentia­l communitie­s that have increasing­ly complained that pickleball games are too noisy.

“When I first saw that gorgeous building, I knew (our pickleball) project was what the property needed to draw people to the community from places like San Francisco, Marin and Alameda,” Hong said. “We're just trying to stimulate the community and make it better. It's a ghost town there now, so why not use the fastest growing social sport to attract people there?”

The land-use requiremen­ts cited by officials were outlined in early-2000s contracts that establishe­d the land within the public trust. In a July letter, the State Lands Commission advised Richmond officials that activities at the Craneway “should” have a connection to the water, increase the public's enjoyment of the waterfront, serve a statewide public interest beyond municipal needs and be open to all rather than be controlled by private parties.

Four days later, Lina Velasco, Richmond's director of community developmen­t, subsequent­ly informed the PB Developmen­t Group that the city would not be able to approve the proposed use and requested that their applicatio­n be withdrawn “at this juncture.”

But Hong is adamant that their proposal does check all the legal boxes to operate on the waterfront and in the process of resubmitti­ng clarified paperwork about the project, which she hopes will be sorted before the Craneway's events cease in December.

“I'll take responsibi­lity for not highlighti­ng how waterfront access is a huge component, but we're clarifying how we believe we fit into and enhance all of those points,” Hong said. “We would not have invested this much money if we didn't have the understand­ing that it would be approved. I just don't understand how they can deny it.”

Reid Boggiano, the commission's granted lands program manager, said even when a project checks off all the legal boxes, rejection is still within a city's prerogativ­e.

Darlene Vendegna — a self-described pickleball evangelist and ambassador who estimates she's taught more than 2,500 East Bay residents to play the sport — said the pushback about ties to Richmond's waterfront and a lack of connection­s to the wider Bay Area is “nonsense.” She said she fields dozens of daily calls and emails about a dearth of local spaces offering regular league play, coaching clinics, indoor courts during inclement weather.

“That is unheard of in the entire Bay Area and will make Richmond an absolute destinatio­n,” Vendegna, who helps organize a local cult-like following online, said in an email. “The geographic location is perfectly situated to allow access from parts of the Bay that are currently pickleball deserts but contain hundreds of pickleball players. The few places there are to play are always overwhelme­d.”

Chris Hagmaier, Hong's son, agreed, arguing that their club, if built, would preserve the building's industrial vibe and sustain a number of community events, but ultimately expand the number of people who actually know that the Craneway Pavilion exists.

“We get that this place is sentimenta­l for a lot of people, but we think more people are going to come to the waterfront as a result of this,” Hagmaier said. “Right now, it's a couple thousand people going there every year, but there's going to be hundreds of people in there every single day once the pickleball club opens up.”

If places like the waterfront Oracle Park — where the Giants can hit home runs to fans in kayaks bobbing in the Bay and even hosted its own pickleball tournament in July — can succeed, he said the PB Developmen­t Groups's could, too — “just without blasting pickleball­s out into the water, hopefully.”

 ?? JANE TYSKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Officials denied a developer's permit applicatio­n for a pickleball club at the historic 45,000-square-foot Craneway Pavilion in Richmond, arguing a lack of a strong connection to city's waterfront and lack of benefit to general public.
JANE TYSKA — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Officials denied a developer's permit applicatio­n for a pickleball club at the historic 45,000-square-foot Craneway Pavilion in Richmond, arguing a lack of a strong connection to city's waterfront and lack of benefit to general public.

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