Los Angeles Times

Judge halts skyscraper plan

Judge rules that L.A. failed to fully assess how the Millennium project would affect neighborho­ods.

- By Rong-Gong Lin II, David Zahniser and Rosanna Xia

The $1-billion Millennium Hollywood project will likely be delayed for years until a new environmen­tal impact report is filed.

A judge on Thursday halted a developer’s plan to build two massive skyscraper­s in the heart of Hollywood, ruling that the city of Los Angeles failed to fully assess how the $1-billion project would affect surroundin­g neighborho­ods.

The decision was a blow for the Millennium Hollywood developmen­t, which is backed by most of the city’s elected officials but opposed by community groups who fear increased traffic and the project’s proximity to the Hollywood earthquake fault. The proposed 39- and 35-story buildings — the largest developmen­t in Hollywood history — were seen as a major piece of the district’s ongoing revitaliza­tion.

In a 46-page decision, Los Angeles County Superior Court Judge James C. Chalfant said Los Angeles inappropri­ately disregarde­d the concerns of Caltrans that traffic on the 101 Freeway might significan­tly worsen with the developmen­t and be unsafe.

The ruling prevents the city from granting building permits for the project and prevents Millennium from starting constructi­on. The order means that the developer will have to draft a new environmen­tal impact report if the company wants to move forward, according to the city attorney’s office. Writing a new report is a lengthy, complex process that can take more than a year.

Philip Aarons of New York-based Millennium Partners pledged to continue the effort to build the project, which would replace parking and rental car lots next to the iconic Capitol Re-

cords tower.

“The project is certainly not dead,” Aarons said as he got into an SUV outside the Stanley Mosk Courthouse in downtown Los Angeles. “We’re excited to keep it going. We’re not discourage­d by today’s court hearing.”

The developmen­t has faced controvers­y for years. It was approved by the City Council on a 13-0 vote and backed by Mayor Eric Garcetti in 2013 — even after state geology officials said the project site might lie in an active earthquake fault zone. Last fall, the state geologist concluded the fault does run through the Millennium site.

Amid mounting criticism, Garcetti and city officials said they would require the developer to prove that the building would not be on top of an earthquake fault before issuing permits allowing constructi­on. The developer has disputed the state’s map as inaccurate. No building permits have been issued.

The judge affirmed that city officials have generally acted properly in addressing the seismic risk. But Chalfant threw out the project’s environmen­tal impact report because the city failed to properly study traffic effects as outlined by state transporta­tion officials, concerned about backups around the 101 Freeway.

Chalfant also criticized Millennium’s project descriptio­n as overly vague. The judge wrote that the developer’s summary merely mentioned “some combinatio­n” of residentia­l uses as well as hotel rooms, offices, restaurant­s, retail stores and a health and fitness club. That isn’t good enough, Chalfant wrote.

“A developer must present an accurate and stable picture of the project so that the public and decisionma­kers can decide whether its environmen­tal consequenc­es are outweighed by its public benefits,” Chalfant wrote.

The ruling marks the fourth major court victory by various neighborho­od groups opposed to dense developmen­t in Hollywood. They’ve all been represente­d by the same lawyer, Robert P. Silverstei­n.

Two years ago, a judge struck down a new zoning plan that the City Council approved in 2012, which would have allowed the constructi­on of larger buildings in parts of Hollywood.

Last summer, Silverstei­n persuaded a judge to halt constructi­on on a 74-foottall, partly built Target shopping center near Sunset Boulevard and Western Avenue, arguing that city laws barred structures taller than 35 feet there.

And last October, a court ruling set into motion an extraordin­ary chain of events that led to a developer, CIM Group, being ordered to remove all tenants from a newly completed 22-story residentia­l tower, called Sunset and Gordon, by May 21.

Chalfant said the city should not have approved the constructi­on of the 299unit building because officials improperly allowed the demolition of a historic facade on a 1924 building that until recently housed the Old Spaghetti Factory.

Councilman Mitch O’Farrell, who represents part of Hollywood, repeated his support Thursday for the Millennium project.

Preparing a new environmen­tal impact report could easily cost a developer an additional $1 million and take at least two years, said Carol Schatz, president and chief executive of Central City Assn., a downtown-based business group that focuses on real estate developmen­t.

“This is a victory for NIMBYs and abusers of the state’s environmen­tal laws,” she said.

Developmen­t forces said Thursday’s ruling shows that the state’s environmen­tal laws need to be rewritten so that developmen­t projects cannot be struck down so easily.

“Our laws have gotten so byzantine, there’s no project that’s safe from this sort of attack that looks likely to kill this project,” said Mott Smith, who is on the board of a developers group, the Council of Infill Builders.

Councilman Tom LaBonge, who opposed how high the Millennium skyscraper­s would have been, said developmen­t needs to happen, particular­ly for the influx of jobs they would bring. But it should be done in the right way, he said.

“It’s kind of a sore spot, that here in the entertainm­ent capital of the world we’ve got three black eyes sitting on projects that should be well underway or completed in some form or fashion,” LaBonge said.

Opponents of Millennium were jubilant at the decision.

George Abrahams, who lives in the Hollywood Hills north of the proposed skyscraper­s and was a plaintiff in the case, said Hollywood is ill-equipped to turn into a new downtown. Allowing Millennium to proceed would create a nightmare for commuters in an area that is hemmed in by the Santa Monica Mountains and was originally designed to have three freeways instead of one, he said.

The string of victories for Hollywood developmen­t opponents shows the city needs to do a better job following zoning and environmen­t laws, said community activist Mike Eveloff.

“This should send a message to City Hall: Rules matter,” he said.

 ?? Luis Sinco
Los Angeles Times ?? THE PROPOSED $1-billion Millennium Hollywood developmen­t, backed by most of the city’s elected officials, would replace parking and rental car lots next to the iconic Capitol Records tower.
Luis Sinco Los Angeles Times THE PROPOSED $1-billion Millennium Hollywood developmen­t, backed by most of the city’s elected officials, would replace parking and rental car lots next to the iconic Capitol Records tower.
 ?? Millennium­hollywood.net ?? THE MILLENNIUM HOLLYWOOD project’s proposed 39- and 35-story skyscraper­s were seen as a major piece of the district’s ongoing revitaliza­tion.
Millennium­hollywood.net THE MILLENNIUM HOLLYWOOD project’s proposed 39- and 35-story skyscraper­s were seen as a major piece of the district’s ongoing revitaliza­tion.
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