San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

ENCINITAS PLANNERS OK PROJECT AT FORMER POST OFFICE

- BY BARBARA HENRY

A revised developmen­t plan for the old Cardiff post office site won approval from the city’s Planning Commission on Thursday, but the battle over the project is expected to continue.

One opponent is threatenin­g to sue and that means the commission approval undoubtedl­y will be appealed to the City Council, Chairman Bruce Ehlers noted.

Put forward by Cartega Internatio­nal Inc., the developmen­t plans call for demolishin­g the now-vacant postal building and other structures on the Newcastle Avenue site and replacing them with a row of shops and offices. The 18,039-squarefoot, two-story developmen­t is proposed to look like multiple, small structures, but opponents initially charged that it looked like “two giant buildings.”

When commission­ers first reviewed the plans at

their Oct. 15 meeting, they agreed with the opponents that the design needed work and decided to continue the item to Thursday’s meeting. The commission­ers told the developers to use the extra time to make changes to the proposed roof line, create more walk-through space between the buildings, and provide more variety in the proposed vegetation, among other things.

On Thursday, project architect Tom Mccabe said they had made those changes, including reducing the roof height and altering the buildings’ exterior treatments to make them more visually appealing.

“It’s not just changing the color, it’s reinforcin­g the notion that these are smallscale buildings,” he said.

Commission­er Susan Sherod, an architect herself, said she felt the developers had done a good job of addressing the commission’s concerns and the new design was “quite good.”

Even the opponent who has threatened to sue — lawyer Darren Quinn, who lives behind the post office site — told commission­ers before their vote that the latest revisions to the proposed roof lines were “a big improvemen­t.”

“I’m not all doom and gloom,” he said. “There’s some good things that have been done.”

However, Quinn said, the proposed developmen­t could be “something that can be amazing” if more work was done, and stressed that he knew he wasn’t the only who felt the plans needed improvemen­t because he was conducting an online survey of residents’ views.

Quinn said that nearly all of 70 people who participat­ed in his survey said they had concerns with the plans and felt the project didn’t fit in with Cardiff ’s character.

The only other public speaker, fellow project neighbor Emmy Garnica, said she thought it wasn’t realistic for project opponents to expect everything to stay the same in Cardiff. The latest redesign of the plans has taken “all sides into account” and provides “a good transition” from the residentia­l area to the east and the commercial area to the west, she said.

The commission­ers ultimately approved the proposal in a 3-1 vote, with Commission­er Amy Flicker opposed and Commission­er Brett Farrow recusing himself because he lives near the project site.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States