San Diego Union-Tribune

PERMITS FOR BAYFRONT PROJECT IMMINENT

Groundbrea­king weeks away on resort, center now that funding is set

- BY TAMMY MURGA

The groundbrea­king for a longawaite­d, billion-dollar resort hotel and convention center on Chula Vista’s bayfront is finally within sight after the approval of the developmen­t’s financing plan.

Port of San Diego commission­ers and Chula Vista council members both unanimousl­y voted last week to support an updated financial structure that lays out how the project will get funded and how much revenue it will generate.

The city expects to issue building permits, concurrent with the financing, sometime between Tuesday and May 26, according to city spokespers­on Anne Steinberge­r. Developers could begin constructi­on the day after closing.

“This project here, we’ve been waiting for it for literally decades,” said Chula Vista Mayor Mary Casillas Salas. “It wasn’t an easy deal. It was pretty complex and it was a rollercoas­ter ride.”

Chula Vista and the Port have worked for years to transform more than 500 acres of vacant and industrial land into a residentia­l and world-class waterfront destinatio­n. The vision is laid out in what’s known as the Chula Vista Bayfront Master Plan, which includes the Costa Vista RV resort that opened last year.

It also paved the way for the bayfront’s centerpiec­e: the Gaylord Pacific Resort and Convention Center. Approved in 2018, the $1.2 billion project uses private and public dollars to build a 1,600-room hotel, a 275,000-square-foot convention center and 1,600 parking spaces. Houston-based RIDA Developmen­t

will build it. Last week, RIDA officials said constructi­on is expected to last three years.

There were multiple hurdles over the decades in getting to where the bayfront project is now, but none were as challengin­g as recent years, said port Commission­er Anne Moore, who represents Chula Vista on the seven-member board.

“Nobody, I think, would have ever imagined that we would have to deal with the pandemic and a war and supply chain shortages and inflation,” she said.

Those global events trickled down to the bayfront developmen­t,

increasing the project’s cost.

Under a previous financial plan, the port and city were set to pay $328 million in upfront public funds, which included $265 million in bond money toward the constructi­on of the resort and $63 million for site infrastruc­ture.

Cost increases, however, called for an additional $18 million. The port and city agreed to each contribute $9 million and provide a $1 million reimbursem­ent to RIDA. This increased their total public investment to $284 million. Site infrastruc­ture costs also jumped, by more than $20 million, for a sum of $85 million, which will be covered by sewer fees, a $25 million contributi­on from San Diego County and grants.

The Chula Vista Bayfront

Facilities Financing Authority, made up of the port and the city, plans to fully repay the bond debt by June 2059.

As the first luxury resort in the South County city, Chula Vista and the port each anticipate­s receiving $151 million in revenue over the first 37 years of the project. Over time, each also expects to receive about $45 million in annual tax revenues. In Chula Vista, $45 million is roughly equivalent to what the city proposes to spend next year for multiple services, including parks, library, finance, animal care and the city attorney’s office, said Deputy City Manager Tiffany Allen.

The project is expected to create about 3,480 jobs during the constructi­on phase and an estimated 3,900 permanent ones, she added.

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