Former Mission Beach Elementary Demolished, Work to Begin on 59-Unit Project

by on May 8, 2019 · 2 comments

in Ocean Beach

Now that the former Mission Beach Elementary School has been demolished, the development of a 3-story, 59-unit mega-plex planned for the property can move forward. The school site on Mission Boulevard, vacant since 2013, was sold off to private developers that year by the San Diego School Board – to much controversy.

Critics at the time derided the school district for selling forever prime beach property – and we covered it then. (Also see some history of site.) The San Diego mayor, community planners and civic activists, as well as residents pleaded with the School Board to keep the land – a primo spot that was a half block from the Pacific Ocean and mere yards from Mission Bay in the public arena, and work with either the City or developers on alternatives.

The pleas fell on deaf ears and the site was sold for $18.5 million to a duo of developers, doing business as McKellar-Ashbrook LLC, registered in La Jolla.

Another controversy broke out about the down-sizing of a public park promised the community by the developer. The community of Mission Beach was first told that the park would be almost one-third acre. However, now, under changes, the so-called park has shrunk by a third or almost 40% depending on what formula is used.

According to San Diego Community News Group:

The City Council voted 6-2 in 2016 to approve McKellar McGowan’s plans to build three-story buildings, with a total of 59 units, split between two development areas on both the south and north sides of Santa Barbara Place in Mission Beach. A lawsuit brought by a group known as Mission Beach Citizens for Responsible Development sought unsuccessfully to overturn the project. 

The Coastal Commission secured concessions from McKellar McGowan, which included reducing the number of units from 63 to 59, and relocating, re-shaping and enlarging the project’s public park fronting Mission Boulevard.

The new developer Lennar Corp. purchased the property from previous developer McKellar McGowan. Danielle Tocco, spokesperson for Lennar Corp. stated:

“Lennar Corporation purchased Bayside Cove in Mission Bay in December of 2018 and will build the community and park per the previously approved plans, which include 59 homesites spanning condominiums, townhomes and one single-family detached home.”

Tocco added:

“Home construction is anticipated to begin in summer with pre-sales planned for July.”

A few years ago, the OB Rag published a “Reader’s Rant” expressing the frustrations of Mission Beach residents by Mike Meyers (a pseudonym for a South Mission Beach resident): We repost an edited version below (even though outdated, the rant lays down the points of opposition, but was written before the number of units was reduced to 59 and the issue of the park resolved):

Mission Beach Residents Upset With Loss of Park, Size of Proposed Buildings and Loss of Alleys

By Mike Meyers

The property was acquired by auction in May 2013 from the San Diego School District for $18.5 million. The property located in Mission Beach is 2.23 acres. (see attachment A)

The elementary school closed in 1973 to students. It has been used by the school district as instructional coaching to teachers and as administrative office until 2011.

The site will include 20 buildings overall. Each unit will have 3 bedrooms and 2 parking spaces. There are different numbers of units in some of the buildings, there will be 10 buildings with 3 units each. 7 buildings with 4 units each. All the buildings will be 3 stories high at thirty feet.

The developers have somehow divided the property which means the city required park has been reduced in their opinion. Plus both parts use the same architect and building style. The northern part call Mission Beach Residences with 51 units and south part is called Santa Barbara Place Residences with 12 units.

Mission Beach dev map 1 ed

Green sections on this map are what developers are proposing.

The Mission Beach community supports the concept of residential uses for the property. The developers had agreed to follow the same grid in Mission Beach with the COU1ts (sidewalks) and alleys.

The Mission Beach community does not support the developers proposal for a required park and the size of the building. The Mission Beach Town Council voted unanimously against the park May 13, 2015. The Mission Beach Planning Group did not have one vote in support of the project at its September 15, 2015 meeting.

Mission Beach dev map 2 ed

Green on this map is what the community wants.

The Park–

San Diego City has determined that when a certain size of a new development occurs, a park is required.

There is a formula to determine size. The original size of the school property required a park of.35 acres which is 15,246 square feet.

After the developers submitted their original first plans for the development, they then divided part of the development within their own entity. This reduced the size of required park to .27 acres as City staff using the formula came up with that amount. But now after Developmental Services and Planning Department used some kind of management magic, the required park was reduce to .201.

The developers originally promised a .35 acre population park at the December 12, 2013 San Diego Planning Commission initiation hearing.

The people of Mission Beach are still asking why the required park for the North part was reduced by 25%. It went from .27 acres to .201. The formula is public information.

Plus the formula did not take into account the summer visitors who stay in the houses. The current formula use 1.87 per person per limit. During the summer there is at least four people per unit. Plus there is the need for a pocket park for at all the kids under 10 years old. The park should be even bigger than the formula when adjusted for summer rentals.

The park is to be placed along Mission Blvd. You will have 30 feet buildings on one side and parked cars on the other side along Mission Blvd. The park will be 269 feet long (including a 20 foot alley for cars) and average 40 feet wide. It will go from 70 feet wide to 10 feet wide. It will have an alley going thru the park and the court sidewalk also going thru the park.

The final design of the park will be made later by the city Park and Recreation. The developer has proposed numerous trees along the buildings and benches plus tables. (Some in the community are afraid the tables will be used by homeless.) With the park this close to Mission Blvd, it will be dangerous for young kids with the possibility of running into the street, along with all the car fumes, to play next to Mission Blvd.

The size of that area is .34 acres which is almost the required formula size of.35 acres. One big reason is the mature Ficus tree. There is a dispute over whether the tree can survive. But the placement of park would allow the park to be 80 feet wide instead of 10 to 70 feet wide and would not all be next to Mission Blvd. Like the developer proposed park.

Original formula for the whole development park (before the partition) was .35 acre=15,246 square feet= 6.35 lots (30xSO feet); (30×80 feet is the normal lot size in that area).

The formula for lots north development of Santa Barbara Place .27 acre= 11,751=4.910ts (30×80 feet);

Development Service management figure of north development .2013 acre=3.65 lots (30×80 feet).

As you can see by the numbers, the developer – by segregating off part of the school development – and the city Developmental Service management have lowered the park requirement, and have reduced the required park almost in half.

The Environmental Impact Report in the expanded park alternative has the park moved to Santa Barbara Place. Notice their drawing used city staff number of .276 acres for that park, not the Developmental Services number of .2006, and which only allows 57 units instead of 63. (See attachment D)

The Buildings—

The Mission Beach Planning Group and the community has a problem with the location and size of the park. But it also had a major problems with the size of each condo and the actual size and location of the buildings.

The original Mission Beach plot map design by the John Spreckels back in the 1914 includes standard small lots 25 feet by 50 feet in North Mission from Santa Clara Place to Pacific Beach Drive.

Other standard lots in the rest of Mission Beach are 30 feet by 80 feet. Corner lots on Oceanfront Walk and Bayside Walk and corner lot on the end of courts are allowed to be a little bit larger.

Since 1979 when the Mission Beach Plan District Ordinance was approved, it has been very rare to find triplexes and fourplexes inside the Courts or Places.

This development’s first plans submitted to the city were mainly duplexes on the court. The current developer’s building plans are now mostly bulky buildings three and four unit buildings that do not fit the character of the community.

But another main problem with the bulk of the buildings is size of the individual condos. With shapes of the individual lots in the community it is hard to fit the number of parking spaces with bedrooms. So the size of allowable living space is limited to 1.1 square feet times the lot size.

Two parking spaces are required per unit. The standard typical 30 foot by 80 foot lot allows 2640 square feet of living space which will allow two 3 bedroom unit and four parking spaces. Thus each condo would average 1320. They could be different size but that is the average size.

This is where the Mission Beach Planning Board has major problem with the developers.

The developers are going to count the alleys and sidewalks as part of the lot size. They are calling the alley and courts (sidewalk) private and allowing public access.

Nobody has ever done this. This allows the developers to build an extra 150 to 225 square feet in each condo. Which will probably later be converted into extra bedrooms without parking spaces by the subsequent buyers. The developers are proposing a Planned Development which is not allowed under the Mission Beach PDO. The developers are trying to subdivide the project to violate the required standard lot sizes of historic Mission Beach.

These individual condos have only two parking spaces for the 3 bedroom units. This will already strain the parking problem in Mission Beach. This makes it difficult to find parking spaces on the street during the week. Plus it restrict the rest of San Diego because parking will over flow onto the parking lots. This will create more of a traffic problem as people drive around looking for parking spaces on the weekends. Thus, all of San Diego is being denied access to use of the beach by Developmental Services allowing the building to be built bigger than any other condo that has been built in Mission Beach since 1979.

The real estate broker John Gross of Colliers International who helped the developers acquire this property had this to say:

“the development is expected to improve neighborhood parking congestion and traffic flow.”

The community has the opposite feeling on those thoughts. The developer states that some college people do not drive and will not need parking. However the trend observed lately are that units are having more than one person per bedroom because the rents have gotten so high. So now there are three people in a two bedroom and four people in a three bedroom. So the parking is getting worse.

The draft EIR stated the development would have an effect on the intersection at the roller coaster. Where is the mitigation. The report was done in February where the cycle was 45 seconds. The development would take it just under the requirement of mitigation. Problems at that intersection on a weekday in the summer, the cycle is 2 minutes and 30 seconds. It is an F intersection. Mitigation is required. Also how will the development affect Mission Blvd one lane traffic. Will the additional bedrooms with more than two cars per unit affect parking and traffic looking for spaces?

Mission Beach has 600 signatures on a petition to save the Ficus tree, the Mission Beach Town Council unanimously opposed the location of the required park, City staff required a larger park, and the Mission Beach Planning Board did not get any votes in favor of the current proposed development, including its so called park.

The community is not against the project. Build the condos to the maximum allowed under the Mission Beach PDO without using the alleys and courts to gain additional square footage. Move the park to Santa Barbara Place so it can be used as a park and not a bunch of tables for the homeless. Plus create a park that a 5 year old can use and not worry about running into the street.

The mayor in his state of the city speech called out for more parks in the city. This proposed park is more of a landscape buffer zone for the development than a park that can be used by the community.

 

 

{ 2 comments… read them below or add one }

Frances O'Neill Zimmerman May 8, 2019 at 6:08 pm

At the time the Board of Education (minus Sharon Whitehurst-Payne who came aboard later on to replace disgraced Marne Foster) voted unanimously to approve the sale of this invaluable site, Mayor Bob Filner showed up to advise against that rash act, as did many others including me.

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sealintheSelkirks May 9, 2019 at 1:11 pm

So my alma mater’s buildings no longer exist. The class pictures I have at least prove that there used to be a pretty cool little beach school there…

From the diagram above I guess there will be a park where the lunch/auditorium building I graduated 6th grade in used to be. At least the site won’t be completely wall t0 wall condos. Not that it matters much at this point anyway.

This comes as no surprise. Looking at current pictures of Middle MB I can’t hardly see any of the real MB left that I grew up in. When I moved out of MB and back to OB in 1980 the place was already toast and we who grew up there knew it. With all the STVRs now…what was the point of having a defunct school when there weren’t enough children to warrant re-opening? Even when I was going there in the 60s Principal Barnyard (Bernard?) was also the principal of Farnum in PB at the same time.

When the destroyers of communities (called real estate ‘developers’ or maybe GREEDHEADS’ would be more appropriate?) went after Evan’s will that stated that Belmont Park was to be kept an amusement park for the children of San Diego in perpetuity, it didn’t take long before the lawyers broke his last wish and started turning it into a beach-front mall…the writing was on the wall. Little Miami is what the wealthy property owners wanted, and it looks like they got their wish.

After all, the only thing that truly matters in life is how much money you have, right? Quality of life is for suckers.

But in the long run none of this is going to matter much. With Global Warming (NOT so-called ‘climate change’ invented by a Republican political hack named Frank Luntz) and the obviously rising worldwide ocean’s increasingly scary prognosis along with the massive increase in ocean storms, this man-made sandspit is going to drown anyway and probably not all that long in the future. Maybe even earlier if the ‘Big One’ earthquake that is overdue hits and causes liquefaction of the loose pumped-in sand that comprises MB. The buildings will sink into the quicksand that ensues and the real estate bonanza will be over. Say La VEE, babee!

Farewell MB School.

sealintheSelkirks

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