July
2008 | by Sam
Borgese
From
the tone of
the recent Planning
Commission meeting,
it sounds as
though, despite
40 to 70 (depending
on how one counts)
community hearings
on the project,
there are issues
remaining around
the project's
traffic impact
on its adjacent
residential
neighborhoods.
 Statements
from residents
of those neighborhoods
showed general
support for
the project
moving forward;
however, there
were strong
concerns about
the traffic
issues from
the residents
who are part
of the Tenth
Street Neighborhood
Association
(TENA). The
TENA speakers
challenged the
Environmental
Impact Report
(EIR) sections
on traffic mitigation
as inadequate.
Specifically,
the TENA speakers
believe that
despite the
many community
meetings on
the project,
the project
developers did
not clearly
hear the issue
of excessive
traffic on 10th
Street potentially
generated by
the project.
The
TENA solution
is a full or
partial closing
of 10th Street
. Certainly
there is precedent
for this solution
in the closure
of 13th Street
east of Maiden
Lane . Although
the street closure
is a handy solution,
other adjoining
resident speakers
at the Commission
meeting opposed
the closure
of 10th Street
. This conflict
placed the developers
in the difficult
position of
choosing which
neighborhood
voice to appease.
Facing the political
reality of a
community vote
on the project,
the developers
appeared to
be open to any
solution that
moved the project
along to meet
a November ballot
deadline.
However,
is appeasement
the right solution?
The
Specific Plan
process and
Measure B were
meant to ensure
that larger
commercial projects
were developed
in accordance
with the words
and spirit of
the Community
Plan; to ensure
as little negative
impact as possible
on the immediately
adjacent residential
neighborhoods;
and to complement
a village ambiance.
The developers
of previous
Measure B projects
(Del Mar Plaza
and L'Auberge
Hotel) were
required to
address these
impacts with
Specific Plan
approval contingencies
and within a
project Development
Agreement including
the traffic
impact on adjacent
commercial and
residential
streets.

Next
Step
for
the
Garden
DM
Project:
Design
Review
Board
Special
Meeting
July
9, 6pm at the Del
Mar TV Studio |
|
In
the Garden Del
Mar Project
the impact of
traffic on the
immediately
adjacent streets
and specifically
to a predominantly
residential
and highly pedestrian
street such
as 10th Street
, appears to
be inadequately
addressed, even
though we have
existing examples
in the Plaza
and L'Auberge
projects of
how to successfully
address such
issues.
The
community has
the time, the
examples and
project developers
who are eager
to reach a solution
that moves the
project forward
to a November
vote and rewards
Del Mar with
an important
anchor to its
southern commercial
area. The solution
to a successful
project will
be to follow
previous Measure
B projects.
With assurances
to address traffic
issues contingent
upon Specific
Plan approval
and contained
within a Development
Agreement, the
developer can
move forward
while the community
and residents
adjacent to
the project
agree to what
works best to
mitigate traffic
on residential
neighborhoods
- now and in
the future.
© 2007-08
Del Mar
Community
Alliance,
Inc. All
rights reserved. |