Los Angeles Times

Vote delayed on Edge plan

Coastal panel puts off the Malibu mansion proposal despite a staff recommenda­tion.

- By Martha Groves martha.groves @latimes.com Twitter: @marthaGrov­es

The California Coastal Commission is keeping U2 guitarist the Edge waiting a while longer over the question of what he can build near a pristine ridge top overlookin­g Malibu.

On Thursday the inf luential panel voted unanimousl­y at its meeting in Santa Barbara to postpone a decision on rock star David Evans’ proposal to build five mansions of 10,000 to 14,000 square feet each, all with swimming pools, in Sweetwater Mesa on the site of an ancient landslide.

The 12 commission­ers put off taking action despite the commission staff ’s recommenda­tion that the panel approve a revised plan for the houses. Jack Ainsworth, the panel’s senior deputy director, had said the current configurat­ion was the least environmen­tally damaging while allowing “for reasonable economic use of the property.”

Several commission­ers expressed concern that, even with concession­s for siting and house heights, the project still violated habitatpro­tection provisions of a recently adopted local coastal program for the mountainou­s zone. The project would affect stands of purple needlegras­s as well as rocky outcrops.

“The LCP should be followed explicitly,” Commission­er Carole Groom said.

Commission­ers and several speakers urged the developmen­t team to consider making the houses smaller and closer together to avoid damaging habitat and views. Several also suggested that two houses be eliminated, an action that an attorney for the developers said would make the project unfeasible.

Attorney Stanley W. Lamport submitted a letter saying that the most current valuation of the five lots is $10.75 million. Constructi­on costs are projected to be at least $9.7 million. With only four developabl­e lots, the letter stated, developmen­t costs would exceed the value by more than $1 million.

Letters of opposition have poured in. Among those who raised concerns were the National Park Service, Los Angeles County Supervisor Sheila Kuehl, Serra Retreat homeowners and the Santa Monica Mountains Conservanc­y, which back in 2011 had agreed to remain neutral on the project — then even more expansive — in exchange for money and dedicated open space.

Joseph Edmiston, the conservanc­y’s executive director, said his group had been wrong to agree to those terms.

“The project is going to have tremendous ... effects,” said Ventura County Supervisor Linda Parks, chairwoman of the conservanc­y’s board. “It goes against our mission on the conservanc­y of trying to protect habitat there. This is a real affront to it.”

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