Newport Beach Condominium
Newport Beach Condiminium
Newport Beach Homes and Condos
Broker Realtor Michael Stark of PostYourProperty.com discusses opportunities for buying and selling homes and condos in Newport Beach, California ...
For Sale, Newport Beach, Townhome, Condo, Condominium, View
For Sale, Newport Beach, Townhome, Condo, Condominium, View, , Newport Terrace, Newportterrace
Newport Beach Condos
Bette Ursini & Maria Ursini BA Remax Condos Plus Brokerage 416-847-0920 Broker - Presidents Club, Hall of Fame Sales Representative - 100 ...
Coastal Commission Staff: Aerie OK, Dock Plans Are Not
The Coastal Commission will discuss the proposed Aerie project at its meeting this month, with staff reports suggesting that the group should approve the planned condominiums but reject plans for docks.
The meeting is scheduled to begin at 10 a.m. Wednesday April 14 in Ventura County, and Aerie will be one of the first items on the agenda .
Newport Beach City Council voted 4-2 in July to allow Richard Julian to replace a 60-year-old apartment building with eight multi-million dollar units at Carnation Avenue and Ocean Boulevard. (Read our story here .)
More than a dozen neighbors have been vocally against the project, however, saying it would create a nightmare of construction noise, ruin coastal bluff and not fit into the neighborhood; read a story about “When Neighbors Collide” here .
The Coastal Commission staff reports were made public late Thursday afternoon; read them here and here .
The reports recommend the Commission reject a planned dock that would replace a 4-slip floating dock structure and with an eight-slip floating dock and guest side-tie, in spite of the Newport Beach Harbor Commission’s approval of the plan. (Read more here .)
“As proposed, the project results in the total placement of 19 dock support piles into the bay floor with a cumulative surface area of approximately 39.1 sq. ft.,” the report states. “These dock float guide piles constitute fill of open coastal waters.”
However, the staff reports did recommend that the Commission approve plans to demolish the existing apartment complex and single-family home to build the new condos — with special conditions. The special conditions deal with construction debris, run-off, long-term maintenance of a public water fountain, planing native non-invasive plans, having a leak detection system for a swimming pool, revising plans for a second-floor deck that blocks public views and requiring Coastal approval of future improvements.
...