Los Angeles Times

Project pits industry against city

Garcetti, L. A. council rezone Harbor Gateway site to allow an apartment complex in an industrial area.

- david. zahniser @ latimes. com DAVID ZAHNISER

Band saws whine. Forklifts beep as they zip in and out of sheds. Aworker slams his sledge hammer into a wooden staircase— a sound that echoes off nearby buildings.

All Access Staging& Production­s, in L. A.’ s Harbor Gateway neighborho­od, is not an especially quiet workplace. Its employees build, ship and dismantle stage sets for concert tours and music festivals. Afair amount of thatwork takes place outside. Nowthe company is expecting a new, unwelcome neighbor: a 352- unit apartment project knownas Sea Breeze. The City Council, with Mayor Eric Garcetti’s support, approved the residentia­l developmen­t this year, over the objections of All Access and themayor’s own planning commission­ers, who say it’s in the wrong spot.

The dispute is, in some ways, a collision of two high- level City Hall priorities: encouragin­g job growth and increasing the number of available homes. Garcetti says Sea Breeze will bringmuch- needed housing to the neighborho­od, helping him reach his goal of adding100,000 new residentia­l units citywide. Critics say the six- story project will undermine the future of manufactur­ing in the area— and is only the latest example of a developer obtaining lucrative, piecemeal changes to existing zoning rules.

“There will always be exceptions and adjustment­s” in city planning, said former Assemblyma­n Wally Knox, who ran unsuccessf­ully for council in March. “But in Los Angeles, the exceptions are swallowing the rule.”

In Harbor Gateway, developer A& M Properties persuaded the council to change the zoning on its 5- acre property, from one that specifies manufactur­ing activities to one that permits housing. The council granted the change despite a long- standing city policy that calls for the preservati­on of scarce industrial property— the kind that supports good- paying jobs.

The policywas created nearly a decade ago, after business leaders noticed that many of the city’s industrial­ly zoned properties were being replaced by lofts, condo projects and retail centers. The Sea Breeze site, just north of Sepulveda Boulevard, is surrounded by industrial­ly zoned properties, officials say.

Jim Arnone, the lawyer for A&M Properties, declined a request for comment. But in a letter sent to council members this year, he said the Sea Breeze site comprised 0.02% of the city’s industrial land. The push to change the zoning, Arnone wrote, reflects the “evolving nature” of the Sepulveda corridor and the Harbor Gateway neighborho­od.

“The city possesses broad legislativ­e authority to decide when it is in the community’s best interests to repurpose existing land use designatio­ns,” hewrote.

Granting developers case- by- case exceptions to establishe­d planning rules can be legally treacherou­s. In 2010, the council approved a 74-foot- highTarget shopping center in Hollywood, in a location where such projects are limited to 35 feet. Foes of the shopping center sued and, after a judge overturned the city’s decision, work on the project stopped. The project has been idle since last year.

In April, Garcetti backed the approval of a 269- unit residentia­l tower in Korea town, even though the zoning for the site allowed only half that many homes. An advocacy group is now weighing a legal challenge.

In Harbor Gateway, property owner L& B Realty — which leases space to All Access Staging— is challengin­g the Sea Breeze project in court. Attorney Ben Reznik said the project’s environmen­tal impact report failed to address the financial harm thatwould be experience­d by nearby property owners, who assumed the zoning in the area would remain heavy industry.

Reznik contends that once Sea Breeze is fully occupied, its tenants will begin complainin­g about the noise created by nearby manufactur­ing businesses. Robert Hardison, a manager at All Access, agreed.

“If you’re on your balcony having a cocktail at 11a t night, and you’re hearing all these trucks moving back and forth, you’re not going to be happy,” he said. “The next step will be to eliminate us.”

L& Balso leases space to the Los Angeles Times, which has a distributi­on center next to the Sea Breeze site. Times spokeswoma­n Hillary Manning said the company has no position on Sea Breeze. A representa­tive of the newspaper attended at least one city meeting on the project and pointed out thatwork takes place at the distributi­on center late into the night, Reznik said.

Backers of the Sea Breeze project say there will be a sound wall and a 101foot buffer between the new homes and nearby industrial buildings. They also argue that scores of newhomes will produce economic benefits. “It’s growth in the community. And when you have growth, that’s usually good for a community,” said Joeann Valle, executive director of the Harbor City/ Harbor Gateway Chamber of Commerce, which sent a letter supporting Sea Breeze.

Zoning laws exist, in part, to isolate neighborho­ods from uses that are considered incompatib­le, such as meatpackin­g plants. Those rules also provide property owners predictabi­lity, letting them knowwhat could be built on the land that surrounds them, said Senior City Planner Shana Bonstin.

When Sea Breeze first came up for a vote last year, planning officials recommende­d an across- the board denial of the developer’s request for a zone change and various exceptions from city rules. They pointed to the policy of protecting land reserved for manufactur­ing businesses.

“We have a need for housing,” City Planner Greg Shoop told the Planning Commission. “Butwe also have a need for those jobs.”

The commission voted 7 to 0 to reject the project. Garcetti later signed a letter seeking to reverse the decision, and Councilman Joe Buscaino, who represents Harbor Gateway, persuaded his colleagues to formally overturn the commission’s decision in February. Buscaino described the long- vacant Sea Breeze site as a nuisance and said it no longerwork­s as a place for industrial businesses. In a statement, he said Sea Breeze would help address the region’s housing crisis.

Planning Commission­er Richard Katz, a Garcetti appointee, said in an interviewt­hat he cast his vote against the Sea Breeze project to “maintain the integrity of the zoning process.”

“Zoning has to mean something,” he said, “or you wind up with cities like Houston… where you find propane tanks next to residents.”

 ?? Gina Ferazzi
Los Angeles Times ?? ALL ACCESS STAGING & PRODUCTION­S in Harbor Gateway is an industrial firm next to a lot where a six- story apartment project is slated to be built.
Gina Ferazzi Los Angeles Times ALL ACCESS STAGING & PRODUCTION­S in Harbor Gateway is an industrial firm next to a lot where a six- story apartment project is slated to be built.
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 ?? Lorena Elebee ??
Lorena Elebee

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