Coastal Commission unpopular with mansion family

posted by Barry Parr on Dec 27, 2005 at 06:02 pm in  Planning & Development
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The Coastal Commission is trying to deal with an increasing number of requests to build McMansions on previously open agricultural land on the Southcoast, reports the LA Times. The article describes the struggle Mike Polacek, a professed environmentalist, to build a nearly 5,000-square-foot house on Bean Hollow Road, half a mile from the beach.

“The dot-com boom really changed everything,” said Peter Douglas, executive director of the commission. “People with wealth buy 50 or 100 acres just to put a starter castle on it; technology allows them to live remotely and commute electronically.

“We have a history of speculators buying ranches for subdivision; but this is a new phenomenon,” Douglas said. “Our farm and remote scenic lands are under pressure by people who want to build these mega-homes.”

Comments

Comment 1 by Kevin J. Lansing  on  Dec 27  at  7:40pm  •  All my comments • 

A enlightening description of how the Coastal Commission voted on this project can be found in the May 2005 issue of California Coastwatcher

(Scroll down to the bottom of the issue to Item #3)

http://www.coastwatcher.com/C41503799/E1523686470/index.html


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