Savi Ranch, Town Center challenges await action
Significant
challenges face Yorba Linda officials as they formulate a long-range
vision for the city's 158-acre portion of Savi Ranch, especially in
allotting more space to sales tax-generating retail businesses.
But,
fortunately, lesser obstacles so far aren't impeding what a city
management staffer is calling an “aggressive” project timeline
for completion of Town Center construction in early 2016.
The Savi
Ranch challenges are outlined in preliminary reports prepared for an
upcoming Savi Ranch Land Use and Mobility Vision Plan that will
picture the site up to 30 years from now,
under a
state Transportation Department grant ($240,000) and city match funds
($24,000).
The
consultant hired to prepare the report sees “untapped development
potential,” since lot coverage now averages 23 percent, well below
the range of 35 to 60 percent allowed in the city's zoning code, and
only 10 of about 80 buildings have the permitted two or more stories.
Current
standards could allow an added 400,000 square feet of ground-level
space and one million square feet second story or above area, but
it's “very difficult, given the city's existing off-street parking
requirements, for projects to maximize...potential coverage and/or
building height.”
For
retail, the consultant found existing consumer spending could support
an added 1.2 million square feet of building space, jumping to
1.6 million square feet in five years due to growth in
household numbers and income.
But
“attracting additional retail businesses...would be difficult
because [the site] is difficult to get to, it has poor
visibility and traffic congestion can make shopping unpleasant.”
And,
since online shopping has changed the retail environment, “One
strategy...is to develop retail destinations that cannot be
replicated online....Fostering experience-oriented shopping might
also position Savi Ranch to compete better with the retail in the
surrounding region....”
In
experience-oriented shopping, the consultant says, “the experience
of the trip is of equal if not greater importance than the material
need for a good or service,” with value coming from socialization
with friends, entertainment or “the quality of the place.”
Meanwhile,
the City Council-selected developer will work around challenges in
building about 80,000 square feet of commercial retail in Town
Center between Main Street and Lakeview Avenue that includes a
six-screen, 30,500-square-foot movie theater complex.
One
challenge, according to a report from Housing and Redevelopment
Manager Pam Stoker, is the developer's “inability to acquire
certain private properties along Lakeview, resulting in a reduced
project scope, loss of retail space, removal of a parking structure
and the inclusion of additional surface parking.”
Despite
the setback, under an “aggressive” timeline, architectural and
engineering plans are to be ready in June, theater negotiations
completed by August, building construction documents due in November,
with construction starting April 2015 and completion January
2016.
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