Los Angeles Times

Two ideas floated for the harbor

Officials in Newport Beach hear proposals for new markers that help guide boaters.

- hillary.davis@latimes.com Davis writes for Times Community News. By Hillary Davis

Two Newport Beach watermen want something more substantia­l, even majestic, than the utilitaria­n pole-mounted light boxes that loom at the ends of the jetties to guide boaters into Newport Harbor.

Keith Yonkers suggests a small, traditiona­l-looking lighthouse at the end of the western breakwater, which juts farther offshore than its counterpar­t a couple of hundred yards east. It wouldn’t house a keeper, and its light wouldn’t need to sweep 360 degrees around, but it would be more handsome and visible than the weathered, nofrills twin structures that now serve as navigation­al aids, Yonkers said.

He pitched the project to the city Harbor Commission this week as a public-private partnershi­p.

“Here we are, one of the largest pleasure-craft harbors in the world, as we all know, but we have these two rusty poles at the end that welcome the sailors back in after a day at sea,” Yonkers told the commission, which agreed to direct staff to contact the Coast Guard for guidance and pass the idea to the City Council.

The current navigation­al aids consist of f lashing lights — green on the west jetty, red on the east — and foghorns behind basket-like slats atop 36-foot-tall metal poles. The west jetty has a green square marker and the east has a neon-red triangular sign, per Coast Guard requiremen­ts.

Michael Lawler envisions a harbor entrance not just more aesthetic but also artistic — statues that offer a nod to local culture and welcome boaters like sentries.

A sailor on the west side would pay homage to the mascot of Newport Harbor High School. A Poseidonli­ke sea king, a tribute to Corona del Mar High School, would stand to the east. The 15- to 20-foot-tall statues would accompany the required navigation­al aids.

“One of the most significan­t lighthouse­s we have in the country is the Statue of Liberty,” Lawler said. “I’m not suggesting anything that grand, but that’s the concept.”

 ?? Kevin Chang Daily Pilot ?? NEWPORT HARBOR’S JETTIES are bookended by 36-foot poles with f lashing lights that help guide boaters. Two watermen this week pitched ideas for remodeling the navigation­al aids into something more artistic.
Kevin Chang Daily Pilot NEWPORT HARBOR’S JETTIES are bookended by 36-foot poles with f lashing lights that help guide boaters. Two watermen this week pitched ideas for remodeling the navigation­al aids into something more artistic.

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