Los Angeles Times

O.C. city’s downtown plan advances

California Coastal Commission approves proposed changes to parking, other issues in Laguna Beach.

- By Lilly Nguyen Nguyen writes for Times Community News.

After years of planning and workshoppi­ng, an updated plan that will guide the growth, design and developmen­t standards of downtown Laguna Beach was approved by the state Coastal Commission in midDecembe­r.

The Laguna Beach Downtown Specific Plan was initially adopted in 1989 and has since been amended nine times, with its last comprehens­ive update in 2000 and its last amendment in 2018. The 2000 amendment expanded the boundaries of the document to the Boys & Girls Club on Laguna Canyon Road and created the Civic Art District.

Work for the latest comprehens­ive update began in 2012 and the City Council adopted the update in July 2020, but couldn’t implement it until it received approval from the Coastal Commission.

Residents have heatedly debated the pros and cons of certain changes for years, with many worried about the relaxing of parking requiremen­ts and fearful of changing the city’s “villagelik­e” characteri­stics.

City spokeswoma­n Cassie Walder confirmed Wednesday that the plan will not go into effect until the City Council adopts the modificati­ons approved by the commission. That first reading by the council is scheduled for Jan. 25.

The changes principall­y relax regulation­s surroundin­g new businesses in the downtown area. Businesses will be required to have three parking spaces for every 1,000 square feet of gross floor area for certain nonresiden­tial uses.

Additional­ly, most uses in the area are now to be permit-by-right as opposed to conditiona­l use permits, in order to streamline and reduce barriers to establishi­ng new businesses in the downtown.

Conditiona­l use permits will be required only of businesses that could potentiall­y create impacts on their surroundin­g neighborho­ods, such as bars, restaurant­s, live entertainm­ent venues and souvenir shops.

Other changes include the reuse of public parking in the downtown area and changes to the design guideline criteria for new projects.

What has not changed are any provisions that would allow nonconform­ing structures to be replaced or reconstruc­ted to their original heights or specifical­ly allow or promote second-story additions to historic buildings.

It also doesn’t affect the city’s historic preservati­on program — also updated in 2020 — and retains a list of properties that are on the city’s historic register and those eligible for the national and state indexes.

“Like everything in the COVID world, the Coastal Commission was backed up so it took us until [December] to get on the agenda with the Coastal Commission and we had a very good outcome [with] Coastal Commission ... because we had a very thorough public vetting process on the downtown specific plan,” Mayor Sue Kempf said during a recent episode of the city’s podcast.

“We worked on it in true Laguna fashion for eight years. We had over 20 Planning Commission meetings. I served on the Planning Commission for five years and during that time, I probably heard the Downtown Specific Plan amendments — I don’t know — five or six times?” said Kempf, who added that a commission­er acknowledg­ed the degree of public input that the city garnered.

Kempf said the updates to the plan principall­y deal with the outgoing but stringent parking requiremen­ts, where property owners were required to provide one space for every 250 square feet of gross floor area for general retail and one space for every 100 square feet of gross floor area for food service usage, and permitting.

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