Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Observatio­n wheel for San Diego park is approved

- By Jennifer Van Grove Van Grove writes for the San Diego Union-Tribune.

SAN DIEGO — A plan to temporaril­y place a 148-foothigh observatio­n wheel in the middle of San Diego’s Balboa Park has received the support of the city’s park advisory group.

The Balboa Park Committee voted 7 to 1 Thursday night in favor of the shortterm attraction called the Balboa Park Star, with one member abstaining. The vote marks an important first step in erecting the temporary ride, which would operate for three to six months.

“The Park and Recreation Department has identified a number of potential operationa­l impacts that must be contemplat­ed in order to fully appreciate the feasibilit­y of this project,” said Christina Chadwick, the city’s assistant deputy director for the parks department. “Given the committee’s conceptual approval tonight, we will now be

moving forward with the goal of getting this installati­on up and running on a temporary basis.”

First pitched by David and Leslie Cohn of the Cohn Restaurant Group and operator Sky Views of America in October, the Balboa Park Star is intended as a pandemic-friendly activity to help revitalize the heart of the park, which has seen

crowds wane amid state and county regulation­s.

The plan calls for Sky Views of America to erect the company’s 148-foot observatio­n wheel, the R50 XL, in the Plaza de Panama near the San Diego Museum of Art.

Cohn, who operates the park’s Prado restaurant, also intends to offer visitors food and beverages inside the ride’s 36 climate-controlled gondolas.

Ticket prices would probably run around $16 per person, with potential discounts available to families, seniors and members of the military. The proponents have also suggested a revenue-sharing approach with the city, offering to contribute $1 per ticket to a park fund.

“When we thought about this project and brought it to you in October, we honestly were naive and had no idea what we were facing … but we think we’ve made great progress,” said David Cohn. The group has received clearance from the Federal Aviation Administra­tion and has held frequent discussion­s with park institutio­ns and stakeholde­rs to alleviate their concerns.

The goal, Cohn said, remains to “bring some joy to San Diegans and bring something unusual to Balboa Park to reenergize the park as we hopefully come out of COVID-19.”

The proposal, although largely supported by committee members, received pushback during the public comment portion of the meeting.

Commenters who submitted their letters before the meeting objected to the size and purpose of the attraction, calling it an “eyesore” and “tacky.”

Several voiced concerns that the ride would detract from the historic nature of the park.

But committee members mostly lauded Cohn for coming up with a creative way to reinvigora­te Balboa Park. The dissenting vote came from Vicki Granowitz, who is also a San Diego planning commission­er.

“In a vacuum, I think it’s a wonderful idea and I applaud your creativity,” she said. “I think this is the wrong solution for the park and for the public at this time — for when it would be up and operating” in the spring and summer, she said. “I think the plaza needs to be for the public, and I think it sends a message that could be problemati­c for what we want to do in the future.”

The Balboa Park Star proposal still needs to be reviewed by the city attorney’s office and evaluated by the city’s historical resources board.

There is one other potential obstacle. State and county health officials must also sign off on operation of the wheel. This means that San Diego County must, at a minimum, return to the state’s red tier, the secondmost restrictiv­e level of its color-coded COVID-19 monitoring system.

Because of consistent­ly high coronaviru­s case rates, San Diego County is now in the most restrictiv­e, purple tier, along with the vast majority of counties.

 ?? A RENDERING City of San Diego ?? of the proposed Balboa Park Star, which would operate for three to six months.
A RENDERING City of San Diego of the proposed Balboa Park Star, which would operate for three to six months.

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