South Laguna face-lift moves forward
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Mike Swanson
Slowly, perhaps, but surely nonetheless, change is happening along
South Coast Highway.
The first bit of evidence are the two decorative medians between
2nd and 4th avenues.
The next will be curb and gutter improvements, and then repaving
cracked or otherwise faulty sidewalks.
For South Laguna residents who have long called for the work, the
change -- part of about $365,000 in construction -- is coming none
too soon.
“This project has to do with mostly pedestrian-related
improvements -- sidewalks, trees, lights -- but it is part of an
overall package,” said landscape architect James Dockstader, who is
in charge of the project.
The biggest hurdle remains: getting Caltrans to reduce the speed
limit on South Coast Highway from 45 mph.
Because it has to go through the state agency, any change there
will have to be handled separately.
Dockstader said Caltrans believes a speed limit reduction is
inappropriate, but residents plan to lobby for the reduction anyway.
In the meantime, residents say they hope the street improvements
will have a psychological effect on how fast people drive, even if
the speed limit remains at 45 mph.
“Having the street trees on the side, the pedestrian-scale
lighting, the additional sidewalks -- all those things are
subliminally telling the public in their cars that now is the time to
slow down a little bit,” South Laguna resident Ann Christoph said.
The trees were the one piece to the work that failed to earn solid
council approval. Council members Wayne Baglin, Elizabeth Pearson and
Cheryl Kinsman all favored smaller shade trees over the tall, open
eucalyptus trees proposed by residents.
Mayor Toni Iseman, on the other hand, backed the plan put together
by residents, Dockstader and other landscape architects.
“I’m concerned about none of us being landscape architects and
having several landscape architects make suggestions about trees,”
Iseman said. “In particular, the trees that were recommended were
recommended because you can see through them.”
The other council members in attendance weren’t swayed, and they
approved the plan with the provision that street trees other than
eucalyptus be looked at.
Residents haven’t been put off by the apparent setback.
“Trees shouldn’t become the issue,” South Laguna resident Greg
O’Loughlin said. “Trees are about 1/100 of this whole item. The
trees, yeah, we’ll see. It’ll happen, but we’re very happy to be
moving this thing forward.”
At a meeting of the South Laguna Civic Assn. on April 1, residents
reiterated that moving forward, at whatever pace, was what mattered.
Resident Willa Gupta noted how nice the new medians looked, and
that those alone appeared to be affecting drivers’ speed somewhat,
but not enough.
In general, the area is changing, and both residents and the City
Council are liking what they’re seeing.
“Driving this morning through South Laguna,” Pearson said, “I
really got the feeling of a village. There’s a lot of pride down
there and new businesses coming in, making an effort to blend in and
make it feel more like a community.”
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