Los Angeles Times

Leery of lighthouse plan

Plans for a 71-foot faux lighthouse at a new park may run aground with a coastal panel.

- By Jill Cowan jill.cowan@latimes.com

Newport Beach’s faux lighthouse plan is double the area’s height limit, and a coastal agency’s staff says it should be scaled back.

Plans to build a 71-foot faux lighthouse overlookin­g Newport Bay are coming up short with state coastal officials who believe the structure would be too tall and overshadow the charm of the surroundin­g waterfront community.

The tower, which would not function as a lighthouse, is seen by city officials as the visual centerpiec­e for new community buildings and a public marina on a piece of city-owned land that is presently home to an aging mobile home park.

The plan for the fake lighthouse comes before state coastal commission­ers on Wednesday, but the panel’s staff has recommende­d that it be rejected unless it is scaled back to 55 feet.

Newport Beach Public Works Director Dave Webb said the city has permission to build a tower of up to 35 feet — the current height limit for the area — as part of the commission’s approval for Marina Park. The city has applied for an exception to build up to 73 feet.

To settle for a 55-foot tower, Webb said, “doesn’t make sense for the additional cost.”

But if commission­ers side with their staff, the city’s plans for an “iconic” structure at the longplanne­d Balboa Peninsula community center may get short shrift.

According to the report, the lighthouse as proposed would impact “public views and community character.”

A 55-foot lighthouse, on the other hand, would be tall enough to house a tsunami warning device the city proposed for the structure, without more than doubling the current height limit.

In its applicatio­n, the city included analyses of nearby structures that also exceed the height limit, including the 81-foot high Balboa Pavilion cupola and a 43-foottall tower at the Balboa Inn.

But, according to the report, most of the six buildings the city mentioned were built before the passage of the Coastal Act in the 1970s, which gave the commission authority over coastal areas, and all were built before the city’s Shoreline Height Limitation Zone was establishe­d in 2005.

The report recommende­d that the commission deny the city’s applicatio­n for the 71-foot structure. It cited the city’s applicatio­n, which argued that the extra height would provide “a navigation­al element for watercraft; an [enclosure] for telecommun­ication and tsunami warning device equipment; a focal point; and an establishe­d iconic landmark.”

Ultimately, the report said, the tower didn’t need to be more than 70 feet tall to achieve any of its stated purposes and would set a bad precedent — a view shared by some residents who have argued against the park.

The tsunami warning equipment is 54.25 feet tall, the report said.

In addition to the tower, the park would include a 23slip public marina, a community building and a Girl Scout building. The project will displace residents living in about 60 mobile homes.

 ?? City of Newpor t Beach ?? NEWPORT BEACH wants an OK to double the area height limit for a tower at the planned Marina Park.
City of Newpor t Beach NEWPORT BEACH wants an OK to double the area height limit for a tower at the planned Marina Park.

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