HomeMy WebLinkAboutCity Council - 97-17 RESOLUTION NO. 97-17
A RESOLUTION OF THE CITY COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF
HUNTINGTON BEACH,CALIFORNIA,APPROVING GENERAL PLAN
AMENDMENT NO. 96-1,LOCAL COASTAL PROGRAM AMENDMENT NO. 96-1,
AND NEGATIVE DECLARATION NO. 96-2
WHEREAS, General Plan Amendment No. 96-1 is a request to amend the Land Use
Element and the Coastal Element of the City's General Plan to incorporate a redesignation of
approximately .88 net acres of real property generally located between Pacific Coast Highway
and Walnut Avenue, and between 21 st and 22nd Streets in the City of Huntington Beach from
Mixed Use-Vertically Integrated housing to Residential High Density-30 units per acre; and
Local Coastal Program Amendment No. 96-1 is a request to revise pertinent maps in the
Coastal Element of the General Plan; and
Pursuant to the California Government Code,the Planning Commission of the City of
Huntington Beach, after notice duly given,held a public hearing to consider General Plan
Amendment 96-1, Local Coastal Program Amendment 96-1 and Negative Declaration No. 96-2
and recommended their approval to the City Council; and
Pursuant to the California Government Code,the City Council of the City of Huntington
Beach, after notice duly given, held a public hearing to consider General Plan Amendment 96-1,
Local Coastal Program Amendment 96-1 and Negative Declaration No. 96-2; and
The City Council finds that General Plan Amendment No. 96-1 and Local Coastal
Program Amendment No. 96-1 are necessary for the changing needs and orderly development of
the community, and are necessary to accomplish the goals and objectives of the General Plan and
are consistent with the other elements of the General Plan; and
The City Council finds that Negative Declaration No. 96-2 addresses the environmental
issues pursuant to the California Environmental Quality Act,
NOW, THEREFORE,the City Council of the City of Huntington Beach does hereby
resolve as follows:
SECTION 1: That the real property that is the subject of this Resolution(hereinafter
referred to as the"Subject Property")is generally located between Pacific Coast Highway and
Walnut Avenue, and between 21 st and 22nd Streets in the City of Huntington Beach, and is more
particularly described in the legal description and sketch attached hereto as Exhibits A-1 and A
2, respectively, and incorporated by this reference as though fully set forth herein.
�N 22: That General Plan Amendment No. 96-1, which amends the General Plan
Designation for the Subject Property from Mixed Use-Vertically Integrated Housing to
Residential High Density-30 units per acre is hereby approved, and the Land Use Plan in the
1
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97-17
Land Use Element of the General Plan, a copy of which is attached hereto as Exhibit B, is hereby
amended to implement General Plan Amendment No. 96-1.
SECTION 3: That Local Coastal Program Amendment No. 96-1, which revises the
pertinent maps in the Coastal Element of the General Plan, is hereby.approved, and the Coastal
Element of the General Plan, a copy of which is attached hereto as,*ibit C, is hereby amended
to implement Local Coastal Program Amendment No. 96-1.
PASSED AND ADOPTED by the City Council of the City of Huntington Beach at a
regular meeting held on the 17t 1 day of mar , 1997.
Mayor
ATTEST: P OVED AS TO FORM:
City Clerk Attorney
REVIEWED APPROVED: INITIATED AND APPROVED:
City Administrator Director of Community Development
ATTACHMENTS:
Exhibit A-1: Legal Description
Exhibit A-2: Property Sketch
Exhibit B: Land Use Plan
�- Exhibit C: Coastal Element
2
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97-17
LEGAL DESCRIPTION
Beginning at the most northerly comer of Lot 10, Block 121 of the Huntington Beach
Seventeenth Street Section bract, as recorded in Boole 4, page 10 of Miscellaneous
Maps, records of Orange County, State of California; thence northerly 37.5 feet
approximately to a point, said point being the Intersection of the centerlines of 22nd
Street and the public alley (between Walnut Avenue and Pacific Coast Highway); said
point also being the true point of beginning; thence southwesterly along the centerline
of 22nd Street and its prolongation approximately 215 feet to the centerline of Pacific
Coast Highway; thence southeasterly approximately 325 feet to an extension of the
centerline of 21 st Street; thence northerly along the centerline of 21 st Street to an
extension of the centerline of the alley, between Pacific Coast Highway and Walnut .
Avenue, approximately 215 feet; thence northwesterly along the alley centerline
approximately 325 feet to the true point of beginning.
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PROJECT 9J7-16-429-470 l PROJECT 937-16-561-586
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UNTINGTON BEACH
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97-17
HUNTINGTON BEACH
CITY OF HUNTINGTON BEACH
GENERAL PLAN
As Adopted by City Council May 13, 1996
f�,6,f ro� Adq 7 i7
97-17
COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT CHAPTER
LAND USE ELEMENT
STATUTORY REQUIREMET
State of California law requires that a Iand use element be prepared as a part of a City's General Plan, as
follows:
Government Code Section 65302(a): A land use element which designates the proposed
general distribution and general location and extent of uses of the land for housing,
business, industry, open space, including agriculture, natural resources, recreation, and
enjoyment of scenic beauty, education, public buildings and grounds, solid waste disposal
facilities, and other categories of public and private uses of land. The land use element
shall include a statement of the standards of population density and building intensity
recommended far the various districts and other territory covered by the plan.l
Of the General Plan elements required by the State,the Land Use Element has the broadest scope. Since it
governs how land is to be utilized, many of the issues and policies contained in other plan elements are
influenced by or influence this element. For example, the Circulation Element defines policies for the
accommodation of vehicular and other trips generated by the population and uses permitted by the Land
Use Element. Similarly, the location and density of uses prescribed by this Element are influenced by
policies for the protection of environmental resources prescribed by the Environmental
Resources/Conservation Element.
TECHNICAL SYNQRSIS
A. DISTRIBUTION OF EXISTING LAND USES
The City of Huntington Beach contains approximately 17,730 acres, or 27.7 square miles. Ninety-eight
percent of the City is developed with residential, commercial, industrial, institutional, public uses, and
streets/highways (Figure LU-1). The remaining two percent of the land within city boundaries is vacant.
Table LU-1 identifies the various amounts of each type of existing land uses as surveyed in 1991.
As the table indicates, residential use is the largest single land use in Huntington Beach, of which, single
family units represents the majority of all housing. The residential neighborhoods are structured as large
"super blocks" throughout the City, generally defined by a one-mile arterial grid and often focusing on a
school and/or park. The City's major commercial areas are generally located along the major streets, such
as Beach Boulevard and Edinger Avenue, at major intersections, and in the downtown area on Pacific Coast
Highway and Main Street. Industrial uses are generally developed in large centers in the northwest, as a
linear corridor along Gothard Street,and adjacent to the coastal frontage in the southeast and southwest.
Residential development comprises 41% of the land area of the City. Single family units are characterized
by densities up to 7.9 dwelling units per acre. Multi-family housing units, at medium density (5.0-19.9
units per acre) and high density (20.0 units per acre and above), are generally concentrated in four areas:
Huntington Harbour, Downtown, Warner Avenue between Golden. West Street and Springdale Street, and
along Beach Boulevard. There are also 21 mobile home parks scattered throughout the City.
1 The Government Code also requires that a land Use Element identify areas that are subject to flooding. This has been incorporated in the
Hazards Chapter of this plan.
2 The density range was established on the residential unit type found within the City at the time of the land use survey,Fall, 1992. The
density categories do not reflect City density categories as stated in the existing General Plan and Zoning and Subdivision Ordinance.
THE CITY OF HUNTINGTON BEACH GENERAL PLAN
97-17
LOCAL COASTAL PROGRAM
VOLUME II:
IMPLIMENTING- ORDINANCES
CERTIFIED MARCH 1992
A11ffiNDED MAY 1992
.AND
FEBRUARY 1994
iA- /,r, 17 7-17
"till
97-17
LOCAL COASTAL PROGRAM
VOLUME II: IMPLIMENTING ORDINANCES
Certified March 1985
Amended May 1992
and
February 1994
Approved by the Huntington Beach
Planning Commission October 16, 1990
Approved by the Huntington Beach
City Council November 19, 1990
Approved by the California
Coastal Commission December 13, 1991
Prepared by
The city of Huntington.Beach
Department of Communtiy Development
,�� f eat 7-17
Idr
97-17
ors Pa
,.COASTAL
ELEMEN -
LCP CERTIFIED MARCH 1985
Amended through October 1992
f
0
u
� a
VOLUME I LOCAL COASTAL PROGRAM
x��`6•T 11a 7
Res. No. 97-17
STATE OF CALIFORNIA )
COUNTY OF ORANGE ) ss:
CITY OF HUNTINGTON BEACH )
I, CONNIE BROCKWAY,the duly elected, qualified City Clerk of
the City of Huntington Beach, and ex-officio Clerk of the City Council of said City,
do hereby certify that the whole number of members of the City Council of the City
of Huntington Beach is seven; that the foregoing resolution was passed and adopted
by the affirmative vote of at least a majority of all the members of said City Council
at an adjourned regular meeting thereof held on the 17th day of March, 1997 by
the following vote:
AYES: Julien, Harman, Dettloff, Bauer, Sullivan, Green, Garofalo
NOES: None
ABSENT: None
City Clerk and ex-officio Clerk of the
City Council of the City of Huntington
Beach, California
G/resolutUreftpg/97-28