Will Dunes resort be scrapped?
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Noaki Schwartz
NEWPORT BEACH -- Operators of the Newport Dunes resort are questioning
whether a proposed hotel is still worth pursuing given severe conditions
slapped on them last week.
City planning commissioners told the developer to erase the hotel’s fifth
floor and remove a third floor from a proposed time-share building that
would face the Dunes marina.
But the deal breaker may be the request to slice the amount of conference
space -- deemed critical to attract business groups -- from 54,000 square
feet to 30,000, a 44% cut.
Tim Quinn, project manager for the proposed resort, said he was feeling
both “shock and disappointment” in the wake of Thursday’s Planning
Commission recommendations.
“We’re going to take a good, hard look at the project,” Quinn said,
adding that he is studying the financial effect of the suggested changes
to the hotel plan.
The Dunes expansion, which would be built in a corner of the Upper
Newport Bay, has sparked controversy with neighbors -- who worry about
traffic and noise -- and with environmentalists who fear the size and
scope of the project.
But Quinn said hacking back on the conference space “cuts the heart out
of the project.”
The conference space was intended to work in unison with hotel
registration, keeping the number of guests up even during the off-season.
If it is cut, the developers are concerned the change could mean the
proposal’s finances won’t work.
Rosalind Williams, head of the city Conference and Visitor’s Bureau, said
she too is disappointed by the commission’s recommendations, since
conference space is key to attracting business. Conference-goers, she
said, generally stay in local hotels, eat at area restaurants and shop in
local stores, increasing the city’s revenue.
Still, the resort would be one of the larger hotels in the area in terms
of room numbers and the biggest in conference space. Presently, the
Newport Center Marriott has the most conference space, 24,000 square
feet, or less than half of what was proposed at Newport Dunes.
If approved, the $100-million full-service Dunes hotel would include
swimming pools, a health spa and restaurants. The resort is slated to
open within the next three to five years, if it gets through the
commission and City Council approval process.
Developers estimate the hotel would bring in $1.4 million in annual city
revenue.
Quinn said they will make a decision about whether to cut the space and
move on or simply cut their losses and withdraw the project altogether by
the end of the week.
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