Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times
A flotilla of small sailboats float past Mother's Beach and the construction of an apartment complex in Marina del Rey July 14, 2008.
OUT THERE

Development threatens the funky life of Marina del Rey

Marina del Rey
Mark Boster / Los Angeles Times
A flotilla of small sailboats float past Mother's Beach and the construction of an apartment complex in Marina del Rey July 14, 2008.
The locals -- old-timers who live on their little boats -- have a lot to lose as development encroaches.
By Scott Gold, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
July 18, 2008
» Discuss Article    (44 Comments)

All along, Carla Andrus' life seemed landlocked, literally and figuratively: She was born in Utah, raised in Watts and was scraping by in a tiny apartment near downtown L.A. when, one night, her husband came across a magazine ad for classic wooden boats being built in Marina del Rey. That, he told her -- teak decks, billowed sails -- looked more like the life he'd once fancied for himself.

"Well," she said, "load up the truck," and the words would amount to her salvation.

 
They moved onto a boat in Marina del Rey, the largest man-made pleasure boat harbor in the world and one of the great assets, and enigmas, of L.A. County's 75-mile coastline. After her divorce, she bought the 22-foot sailboat Seguin for $1,400 -- still the most cash she has ever held in her hands at any one time. As of today, Andrus has lived on a boat for half of her 55 years.

The life is not for everyone, Andrus acknowledges. When she stands up, her head brushes the weathered tarp that is her roof. Her bedroll consumes the entirety of the floor space, and when she lies down, her belongings are all within arm's reach: a tiny alarm clock, a tiny bottle of olive oil, three tiny houseplants. "I know the boat could use a couple things, maybe a little varnish," she said. "But to me, it's heaven."

It is a way of life that is under duress in Marina del Rey, where a building boom has added a layer of turmoil to a timeworn throwback.


More than a dozen development projects worth several billion dollars have been built or proposed -- projects that could add 3,000 apartments, as well as hundreds of hotel rooms and tens of thousands of square feet of restaurant and retail space, to an 800-acre area that has only 8,500 residents to begin with.

The tub-thumpers among them are lined up at the docks and pledging to do battle: "live-aboards" like Andrus, boaters, old-timers alarmed to see their local diner closed to make room for "mixed-use" construction. Most, however, say it would be an oversimplification, even a falsehood, to give them the usual no-growth labels.

Instead, they contend, the trouble is that government regulators have forgotten that the marina was built on public land for public recreation. The county earns rent from the businesses that lease the waterfront -- and, cash-strapped, has become intent on maximizing profit.

The activists say the marina's economy is ballooning, with skyrocketing rents and new rules -- against boats that are small, old and decrepit -- that seemed designed to push out the working class. The funky character of the marina, where salty live-aboards have long rubbed shoulders with yacht owners, is being lost.

They point, for instance, to the area known as Mother's Beach, a popular horseshoe-shaped beach at Admiralty Way and Via Marina.

The beach is popular with locals and visitors, from young mothers who gather regularly and gave the beach its name to families who hold extravagant weekend barbecues replete with exotic ethnic dishes and vases of flowers atop picnic tables.

Developers would like to surround it with hotels, new apartments, restaurants and retail, which would probably push aside picnic tables and parking spaces and effectively turn it, critics argue, into a private beach on public land.

"So you can see that we're not anti-development activists. We're humanists," said Bruce Russell, 79, a retiree who has lived here since 2000. "They could do marvelous things here. But if you just ask the developers what they want -- and you don't ask the people who live here -- what do you think you're going to get?"

Marina del Rey is a cash cow. Everyone agrees on that, if nothing else.

The leases will generate more than $35 million this year, much of which goes into the county's main bank accounts and is used to pay for law enforcement, healthcare programs and the like. That figure could double once the development is complete, and that doesn't even include other revenue, such as hotel bed taxes.

"We've got a 45-year-old asset that should be the crown jewel of the county," said Los Angeles County Supervisor Don Knabe. "We need to pick up the pace."

The county has competing agendas: public recreation and raising as much money as it can from the leases. David O. Levine, president of the Marina del Rey Lessees Assn. and chief of staff to Jerry B. Epstein, a prominent lessee, said both agendas can be pursued at once, "but it requires some common sense."

Levine's company has proposed tearing down the dated 202-unit Del Rey Shores apartments and replacing it with a 544-unit apartment complex, a project that would cost more than $130 million.

In 2001, the company submitted its proposal to extend its lease. After a series of public hearings, the county's Small Craft Harbor Commission and county supervisors voted to negotiate a new lease. Then a design committee had to weigh in. Regional planners held five hearings; their approval was appealed to supervisors, who turned down the appeal after two more hearings.

Then, a nearby condo association sued to block the project.





Post Comment

Name
Enter your comments and post to forum
By participating you agree to our Terms of Service and represent that you are not under the age of 13.
 
Discussion

Share your thoughts on this story and this neighborhood.
 
1. We need a Master Plan for MdR which the Dept.of Beaches & Harbors and the L.A.Board of Supervisors have refused to do! Some of my clients choose to enjoy a lifestyle on their vessels as legal live-a-boards as I do on my 42' sailboat. Esprit I is the most expensive in MdR for apts.and boat slips and quoted upwards of $40 + per foot for a 60' slip which is double any other in MdR! Residents need to attend the Small Craft Harbor and the Design Control Board meetings to let the "powers that be' hear from us. MdR is a SMALL CRAFT HARBOR AND RECREATIIONAL AREA for the surrounding communities and development is secondary. Lets keep it that way.
Submitted by: Detaillady (Dorothy Franklin)
9:18 PM PDT, Jul 20, 2008
 
2. What about the "black market" for boat slips that abounds in Marina del Rey? It starts with corrupt dock masters who have been empowered by management to evict whomever and when ever. End-ties can command prices in the thousands of dollars under the table. Boat owners who are paying these fees don't speak up as they are afraid of retaliatory eviction. How many evictions have to take place before the people who live on the water get together and form a Floating Home Association as they did in Northern California? This is the only way to stop the arbitrary and fraudulent evictions by unscrupulous landlords.
Submitted by: ncartocci
12:41 AM PDT, Jul 20, 2008
 
3. The Times really missed the boat on this story. This is not just about the few liveaboards but thousands of boaters that invested in the Small Craft Harbor built with taxpayer money and now are being told to "be on their way" because there are wealthier clients. This is about Cleansing, Gentrification, Corruption on Public Land, Campaign Contributions and the demise of the California Coastal Act. Public Access can be bought and sold and Supervisor Don Knabe is the broker. Organization of citizens and class action lawsuits will change the politics in Marina del Rey.
Submitted by: Jon Nahhas (LAMariner.com)
7:12 PM PDT, Jul 19, 2008
 




LM Pagano's house has a timeworn elegance that feels more like New Orleans than Los Angeles. Photos
He is America's premier authority on travel. Now 80, he still can't slow down.
The L.A. Police Chief's four bedroom home is on the market at $1,875,000. Photos
"Bruno" takes the lead, but "Ice Age" and "Transformers" don't fall off much. Photos
- Box office news
 

ADVERTISEMENT


ADVERTISEMENT