HomeMy WebLinkAboutCT 98-14; Thompson/Tabata; Tentative Map (CT) (67)SUNDAY, MAY 6,2001
JAMIE SCOn LYTLE / STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Joe Hull of Carlsbad is a leader in the Spinnaker Hill neighborhood's
protest against a proposed development near his neighborhood, which
would extend Rose Drive, making it a central thoroughfare.
Opposition grows
to development
• Petition from
Spinnaker Hill is
latest challenge to
262-home project
MICHAEL J. WILLIAMS
STAFF WRITER
CARLSBAD — Standard Pa-
cific Homes' proposal to build
262 homes on 82 acres in south
Carlsbad is provoking prolific op-
position from the proposed devel-
opment's neighbors, protest peti-
tions filed widi City Hall show.
Last year, a petition signed
by about 300 residents from the
Vista Pacifica subdivision west
of the project site was submit-
ted to the city to express con-
cerns about traffic entering
their community from the new
development. Most recently,
the city in April received a peti-
tion opposing the project that
was signed by more than 360
residents, predominantly from
the 300-home Spinnaker Hill
subdivision south of the Stan-
dard Pacific project, which
would be built at Poinsettia
Lane west of Aviara Parkway.
"Our fear is that die addition-
al traffic would be detrimental to
> GROWS, B 7
Lagoon group to start
monthly talk series
• First speaker
set for Saturday
at Batiquitos
Nature Center
JVMCHAEL J. WILLIAMS
resentatives announced.
The series launches Saturday
with a presentation at 10 a.m. by
Kay Stewart of the California
Native Plant Society, and it will
continue indefinitely at the
same time on each second Sat-
urday of the ensuing months.
The talkc w.-ill r^L-o r,l~~~ •- -i
GROWS
Continued {torn B-l
City planner says
vehicle volume in
development won't
violate standards
our residents," said Don Connors,
a Spinnaker Hill resident and pe-
tition signer. "We don't think an-
other development should dump
traffic on our streets."
City planners and engineers
concluded in a preliminary envi-
ronmental report that any nega-
tive effects resulting from the
project can be offset. Senior plan-
ner Mike Grim said the project's
traffic study shows the develop-
ment would not generate vehicle
volumes violating city standards.
A 30-day public review and
comment period ended Friday
on the preliminary report for
the project. City analysts will re-
view and respond to the com-
ments in a final environmental
report, which will accompany
the project plan documents
when they are submitted to the
Planning Commission and sub-
sequently to the City Council.
Grim said the project would go
before the Planning Commis-
sion on June 20 at the earliest.
Phone calls to Standard Pa-
cific Homes' project manager
were not returned Thursday and
Friday. Grim, however, said the
developer as well as the city
staff are heeding the comments
from residents. He said a work-
shop was held last year to give
the public a chance to examine
the plans and offer feedback.
The property is a roughly rec-
tangular lot, which extends to
Aviara Parkway just north of its
intersection with Poinsetria.
The Vista Pacific petition
protests the extension of Alyssum,
which now dead-ends at the Stan-
dard Pacific property line. Many
Vista Pacifica residents fear the
extension of Alyssum Drive will
divert traffic from the new project
onto their streets.
In their petition, Spinnaker
Hill residents express concern
over the project's effect on
Daisy Lane, one of their main
residential streets and a connec-
tion to Batiquitos Drive. Batiqui-
tos intersects Poinsettia Lane,
an Interstate 5 connection, and
Aviara Parkway, which carries
traffic to El Camino Real.
The Standard Pacific plan
proposes to connect Rose Drive
between Poinsettia and the
southern edge of the property so
that it serves as a central thor-
oughfare for the new develop-
ment. Like Alyssum, Rose Drive
now stops at the project proper-
ty line, but on the south side in
Spinnaker Hills.
Connors and other residents of
both Vista Pacifica and Spinnaker
Hills say they want Standard Pa-
cific to put another entrance road
on Poinsettia rather than hooking
up with their streets.
"Daisy right now is a safety
problem because people, includ-
ing our own residents ... tend to
speed down Daisy," Connors said.
"Daisy is not a collector street,
ifs a residential street. We're all
in favor of their project, but don't
put your problems in our back
yard, and they don't have to if
they redesigned it and put their
entrances on Poinsettia."
Spinnaker Hill resident
Joseph Hull, a traffic engineer
with the state Department of
Transportation, is taking a lead
role in battling the street designs
now shown on Standard Pacific's
blueprints. He concedes that
Standard Pacific representatives
have been cooperative and in
fact have made some changes in
response to the residents' con-
cerns. "We realize overall that
certainly there is a need for hous-
ing in the area, but on the other
hand it shouldn't be done at the
expense of the communities that
already exist," Hull said.
The traffic analysis indicates
an average of 1,920 vehicle trips
a day now occur on the stretch of
Daisy between Rose Drive and
Batiquitos. The Standard Pacific
project would add 760 cars a day,
which is 30 percent of the total
traffic generated by the pro-
posed homes, according to the
analysis. "There's currently about
2,000 trips a day on Daisy and to
me, that's about as much as a
street like Daisy should handle,"
Hull said. "This (project) will put
about 800 more cars a day there
and that's just too much. With all
that traffic, I wouldn't let my son
walk down there. It really bifur-
cates Spinnaker Hill."
The city's analysis, however,
concludes that even with the addi-
tional cars from the new project,
the total trips on Daisy wouldn't
be much over 2,000. Grim said the
new streets will provide addition-
al outlets for traffic from Spin-
naker Hill and Vista Pacifica that
balance the impacts to some ex-
tent. "According to (the project)
analysis, there has been no viola-
tion of the traffic standards,"
Grim said. "When we connect
new development, people will
drive from old development using
new development's streets, so it
works both ways." Grim stressed
that the city will carefully consid-
er the criticisms to date as well as
comments aimed at the project in
future public hearings.
Contact staff writer Michael J. Williams
at (760) 901-4082 or
mwilliams@nctimes.com.
PROJECT
Continued from B-l
busy, and we think the project
will move along more quickly
now," Maturo said. Maturo
wouldn't speculate on when the
project will be finished.
The $10 million project will
be funded entirely from dona-
tions, he said, but the society
has only received enough dona-
tions to pay for one of the 14
statues, he said.
"The timeline will really de-
pend on donors," he said.
One of the four completed
(CO) NORTH COUNTY i IMES
statues now stands in front of
Mission San Luis Rey.
The rest are located at Mary,
Star of the Sea Church in La Jol-
la, St. Paul's Episcopal Church
in North Park and Mission San
Juan Capistrano in Orange
County.
The new artist has just com-
pleted a bron2e sculpture for St.
Peter's Roman Catholic Church
in Fallbrook.
That sculpture will be in-
stalled and dedicated this sum-
mer.
Contact staff writer Erin Walsh at
(760) 9014090 or
ewalsh@nctimes.com.