State readies approval of Crystal Cove vision
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Paul Clinton
The state’s Parks and Recreation Commission is set to consider, at a
Friday meeting, a plan to refurbish the historic cottages at Crystal
Cove State Park and rent them out to the public.
The hearing, which will be held in Newport Beach, comes after two
years of public input into how the state should use cottages it
purchased from the Irvine Co. in 1979.
“The public input process has been ... almost textbook in how it
has opened doors to a multitude of creative ideas for this special
place,” said Acting State Parks Director Ruth Coleman. “Those ideas
have helped us create a plan that is truly a shared vision.”
At the Friday meeting, which will be held at Newport Beach’s
Radisson Hotel, the commission will vote on an amendment to a 1982
general plan that needs approval before the restoration can occur.
The commission will also be voting on the reuse plan, which local
environmentalists endorsed after an earlier proposal to build a
luxury resort at the cove wilted under the heat-lamp of public
opposition.
“State Parks have incorporated something for everyone in this
plan,” said Laura Davick, a former Crystal Cove resident who now acts
as an activist in its restoration. “They have a good understanding
for what is wanted and needed down there.”
The state released an environmental report of its plan in October.
If the commission approves the amendment and plan, the state would
move forward with extensive rehabilitation that could begin as early
as the fall. The first cabins could be available as soon as the fall
of 2004.
A total of $12.1 million has been set aside for the work, which
would fund the restoration of 25 cottages for overnight use by
individuals and four cottages as dormitories for groups.
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