Crystal Cove plan meets with some skepticism
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Paul Clinton
CRYSTAL COVE -- A state plan to turn the cottages here into overnight
rentals, interpretive centers and research labs is getting a cool
reception from environmentalists and former residents of the beachfront
community.
The plan, released by California State Parks on Thursday, would allow
the public to rent some of the 46 now-vacant cottages for between $20 and
$150 per night.
Also on Thursday, the state released preliminary estimates for
restoring the cottages that range from $12 million to $20 million. State
Parks officials updated estimates from a 1994 evaluation to take into
account inflation.
The plan is still likely to undergo changes. California State Parks
spokesman Roy Stearns said the plan was only a starting point for further
dialogue.
“The public should take a real close look at it,” said Jeannette
Merrilees, a Laguna Beach environmentalist. “An idea like that should
produce a lot of discussion. It’s fairly controversial in the history of
park planning.”
While Merrilees said she would be against giving any of the cottages
to foundations for any kind of private use, be it educational, scientific
or otherwise, others, such as heiress Joan Irvine Smith, cautioned
against opening all the cottages to the public.
“I’m a little uncomfortable with the overnight use,” Irvine Smith said
Friday. “That part of the cove is very fragile.”
Smith, who marshaled support earlier this year to defeat an earlier
plan for a luxury resort, has been on the front lines with those hoping
to shape the cove’s future.
She also said she hoped the cove would not be treated like other parks
in the state, but that it would be preserved as an “island in time.”
The state would spend between $46,000 and $285,000 on each cottage,
depending on a variety of factors, according to Thursday’s restoration
estimates. A State Parks spokesman said the numbers are extremely
preliminary and that funding to restore the homes, which were placed on
the National Register of Historic Places in 1979, have yet to be found.
Laura Davick, who founded the Alliance to Rescue Crystal Cove, has
said the state’s plan “has something for everyone.” On Friday, Davick
said she shares Irvine Smith’s concern.
“It’s important that we give the project careful consideration,”
Davick said. “We’d like to see the cottages stay as rustic and as basic
as possible.”
The state would limit overnight use of the cottages to the public.
Visitors could only stay one week at a time and no more than 30 days per
year.
“We don’t want anybody to squat forever there,” Stearns said.
The public will have a chance to review the plan in October, Stearns
said, and to offer comments on it.
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