FEATURE Marblehead and Plaza San Clemente: An Update by Bill Thomas S
everal Saturday’s ago, realtor Steven Craig, members of his staff, and San Clemente Mayor Tim Brown co-hosted
a walking tour for over 100 interested parties of the 52-acre site of the forthcoming Plaza San Clemente. The site is to host an outlet store area, a hotel and restaurant complex, and will also include 313 homes on the remaining 196 acres.
Some 100 outlet stores are planned, with
many commitments already on paper. The 4- story hotel will have 129 rooms, and eight restaurants are in the mix. They will vary in name and cuisine, Craig announced, and valet parking will be available. Every effort will be made for the commercial tenants to take ad- vantage of the ocean views and breathtaking sunsets, the major attractions of this large land parcel.
The commercial area is 90% finished with
preparatory construction work, including ground filling, electrical, water, and gas require- ments. The attractive bridge, reminiscent of the one spanning the Thames River in England, overlooks what will become an attractive, plant
San Clemente center to the new enviable neighborhoods to the sweeping natural vistas of the many trails, parks and open spaces, this will be a place not only for me to be proud of the small role I played helping to shape Mar- blehead into reality, but for hundreds of others who also helped.” City Planning Commission member
Developer Steve Craig, co-hosts a walking tour of the Marblehead Coastal property in April.
- a planning, engineering, and surveying com- pany - has worked on Marblehead projects, in- cluding Plaza San Clemente, for over 30 years – through the Nixon Library consideration; the Lusk company’s plans for 500 homes, a golf course, commercial center, and resort hotel; the SunCal purchase; the nationwide economic plunge; the bankruptcy of Lehman Brothers;
the potential for success in bringing Johnson and Craig together for what will turn out to be of great benefit to San Clemente and one of the most remarkable developments on the coast of California.” Mike continued, “I’m thrilled that the long
awaited, much anticipated San Clemente Plaza is about to start coming out of the ground.
Wayne Eggleston brought up several concerns in his comments: “Marblehead outlet will dra- matically change the visitor experience of San Clemente. Essentially what the developer stated was that 2/3 of the business will come from shoppers 50 miles or more from San Clemente. Very little will come from San Clemente resi- dents themselves. Would it not have been good to have a development whereby our residents could benefit, other than sales tax dollars, and at the same time not have a dramatic increase in freeway and road traffic? I realize the ‘horse has gone out of the barn,’ but a high end resort like they have in Dana Point would have brought in visitors who would have shopped in our downtown village and restaurants. Signage is still an issue, and the developer was very vague about that issue. Saying that, the devel- oper built the Carlsbad outlet and prior to it being sold, it was a high-end outlet with good taste. Hopefully the architecture and shop- ping/restaurant experience will also be tasteful in this development.” City Council member Lori Donchak was
Architectural renderings of the outlet center coming to Marblehead Coastal property.
and tree-filled valley, as well as the ocean be- yond. Light pollution has been a concern, and there is ballast protection and directional con- centration on the complex itself. Visually, Craig compares the overall layout
more with Fashion Island than South Coast Plaza. There is to be parking for 3000 cars in- cluding a two-story structure, and shuttles are also planned. A sidewalk will surround the en- tire facility. At its April 2 meeting, the City Council
approved the residential development agree- ment with Marblehead LLC, Arch Insurance Company, and Marblehead Development Part- ners LLC - the project headed by Arizona home builder, Taylor Morrison Home Corp. Mike Burke, a San Clemente resident and an executive vice president of RBF Consulting
10 SAN CLEMENTE JOURNAL
the California Coastal Commission’s “peek-a- boo” involvement; and, through the years, the City Council’s numerous approvals and disap- provals of the various proposals for the site. As to the history of the project, Mike
wrote, “ While there many people who con- tributed mightily to the ultimate success of the Marblehead plan, I don’t think we would have ever gotten to the point we are today without the beloved late Jim Johnson, the overall mas- termind of the Marblehead project; Steve Craig, whose unique vision and expertise will create a retail center that, at times, seemingly, didn’t meet the impossible demands of the community and the commercial needs and aes- thetic opportunities of a successful center; and David Lund, the former City Economic De- velopment Director who had the wisdom to see
Walking over the site, crossing over the beauti- ful bridge, gazing down the spectacular valley teeming with native plants and singing birds, soaking in the blue skies and blue ocean vistas, listening to Steve talk about his vision for the center and his descriptions of what his project would be and feel like was really a moving ex- perience for me. I’ve spent thousands of hours, tens of thousands really, working on Marble- head trying to play a part in bringing a first rate project to reality in this community I love. With that two-hour walk on Saturday, I finally knew it was going to happen. I truly felt it. Not only that it was going to become reality, but that it was going to be even more marvelous than I imagined…and I have long imagined that it would be spectacular. From the histori- cally significant architectural theme of the Plaza
more positive: “I expect the shopping center to be very popular, which creates a pressing need to proactively manage traffic. Craig Realty Group estimates upwards of 1,000 jobs to be created by the project. It will be important to work with Metrolink to see if more frequent stops can be made at North Beach. I'm glad to hear shuttles are being considered. Anything that can reduce potential traffic is a plus. Over- all, it has a positive effect. The thoughtful use of open space and trails and park offers balance. The shopping center brings sales tax money to the city that can be used to maintain our parks and beach. Likely there will be some growing pains, that's true with anything new, but, ulti- mately, the shopping center will be a good ad- dition.”
Community activists Joan and Jim Nielsen
were very complimentary. From Joan - “I’m very impressed with the quality of the project - the custom roofs, walls and pavers. From Jim - “I was impressed with Steve Craig’s concern in impacting our City with additional traffic and his desire to explore shuttle busses to serve the rest of the City. Certainly, the additional sales tax revenues will be welcomed by the City. A first class operation in my mind. Let’s get it rolling.” “An outstanding factory outlet develop-
ment,” wrote Citizen of the Year 2013 Don Glasgow, “I love what the developer is doing to bring to our city what might be a ‘world class’ factory outlet center. It appears to me the ma- terials being utilized to build the center and their quality of architectural design is simply the best, and in concert with our Spanish Colo-
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