• 26Ağu

    Believe it or not, Anaheim Garden Walk is set to open with its first tenants November 15th 2007. Since 1998 until 2006 Garden Walk was the very definition of vapor construction. A lot of talk, but not a shovel full of dirt moved. But once ground was broken boy did they move fast. Now the Disneyland Resort adjacent walking mall will open this November a few restaurants with shops and entertainment to open next year.

    When the AGW was announced, it was supposed to act as a more adult alternative to Disneyland’s Downtown Disney. With at least one nightclub on the current tenant list, it looks like that’s the direction they’re still moving. The original plans called for an L-shape with one end connected to Harbor Blvd and one to Katella. However, it looks like the Harbor Blvd connector is gone now, that might affect the volume of tourists AGW attracts.

    Anaheim Garden Walk will have to overcome the fact that the Anaheim Resort, as beautiful as it has become, is still not known for heavy pedestrian traffic. Most tourists at hotels not adjacent to Disneyland take a shuttle bus directly onto Disney property. At the end of the day these same tourists return back to their hotels to get rest their tired bodies. However, if AGW can shift the habits (probably through heavy marketing) of enough tourists, I think it will be a boon to the resort district.

    Way back when, Disneyland had the option to buy this property. However some bad blood between its previous owners put it out of Disney’s price range at the time. So now a third party will own the most direct link between Disneyland and the site of it’s rumored third gate. There is still a chance that Disney could lease some space and build one of its new hotels there, possibly a Disney Vacation Club.

  • 26Ağu

    You wouldn’t think you could tie Bats Day, High School Musical, and examples of tolerance and intolerance together.

  • 26Ağu

    Although the City Council didn’t go as far as overturning their previous decision to allow high priced condos in the area zoned for tourism business only, they did finally schedule the matter for a city wide vote. More than half of the people who spoke last night supported the Save Our Anaheim Resort backed referendum. It’s clear from how quick SOAR was able to gather signatures for the petition that the support among Anaheim residents is even greater.

  • 26Ağu

    This was left in a comment in another thread. But I think it deserves more attention so I’m promoting it to it’s own post. The author is David Michael, better known as Darkbeer around the Disney fan community.

    Here are a few thoughts and comments about info I gathered from watching the Public Comments and Council Debate about the Referendum to overturn the council’s zoning change.

    Public comments for the Zoning change (Item #54) started just after 5:30 PM.

    One of the earlier speakers made the point this really isn’t about Disney, but about a zoning change that approved High Density Housing in the area.

    The Anaheim Zoning Commission denied the zoning change, and only by the City Council taking the matter up (on their own) and then overturning the zoning commission has the item gotten this far.

    One of the heads of the Orange County Tax Association makes the point that the zoning change breaks the deal made back in 1994 to make the area commercial and to help all the businesses in the area.

    I have to give kudos to Larry, who came up to speak to the council. He stated he is a Jungle Cruise skipper, and talked about the benefits of what Disney has done for Anaheim. He also spent the majority of time addressing the public, not the council members. I was impressed with how he handled his short time at the podium (max of 3 minutes). Once again, Larry… way to go!

    A Building Union member came up and stated that 11 different unions are against the zoning change. He stated the unions are in favor of affordable housing, but not in this location. He stated that he thought this zoning change was all about Money, Greed and was a Land Grab for SunCal.

    Another speaker talked about how a lot of this has been a Smoke Screen, and a personal agenda is driving the real issue.

    The Co-Chair of SOAR brought up the fact of future dollars, and how Garden Grove has been getting a lot of the business that Anaheim could have gotten if they would have solidly stood behind the entire Resort Area. (Such as new hotels, restaurants and shops).

    The Mayor brought up the fact just prior to the main council meeting, they were having a dealing with affordable housing for the City of Anaheim, and that 1,429 units were currently under construction in the city.

    I presume there will be some quiet periods in the next few months, but we know the following will happen.

    SOAR submitted its Initiative signatures for verification today. And if they have enough valid signatures, then the matter will go in front of the City Council (and more public comments) for placement on a ballot.

    The CDPA has to figure out what to do with there “Strawberry Field” initiative, and what to do. Do they submit it directly to the City Council for placement on the ballot without the need to gather signatures. And does the City Council approve it. And if they do, how strong is the case for favoritism against the council? And does that threat keep the city council from placing it on the ballot without signatures.

    And if CDPA decides to bypass the council, or if the council refuses to place the initiative on the ballot without signatures, what does CDPA decide to do?

    They could either drop the 3rd matter, and just focus its time, money and effort on getting the two SOAR matters defeated in June, or do they spend Hundreds of Thousands of Dollars to get the required 15% of registered voters signatures. And can they get enough signatures in the 6 month period. If they attempt to gather signatures, then there will be ongoing ad campaigns on both sides, and of course plenty of news stories and press releases from both sides. So that will keep the story going straight thru until June.

    But if the council waives the signature requirement, or if CDPA decides to drop the Strawberry Field measure, then things will quiet down in the next couple of months until after Easter, when the two groups both kick the ad campaigning into high gear for the June election.

    Whatever happens, it will be interesting to watch….

    David also sent a long a link to this press release where SOAR announces they have filed their second Anaheim Resort District initiative.

    The Save Our Anaheim Resort (SOAR) coalition today delivered 31,348 signatures to the Anaheim City Clerk, 10,000 more than required, to place an initiative on the ballot that will give voters the right to approve any future changes to the original tourist-serving vision of the Anaheim Resort District.

    The initiative addresses the long-term need to protect the Resort District, its boundaries and land uses, according to the 4,650-member SOAR coalition. The Resort District is less then 5% of the city, yet generates over 50% of Anaheim’s’ annual tax revenue.

    SOAR also led the successful drive to place a referendum on the ballot to overturn a high-density housing development in the Resort District, which was approved by a 3-2 Council vote in April. On Tuesday night, the Council placed the referendum on the June 3 ballot. Combined, SOAR has collected more that 52,000 signatures from Anaheim citizens to protect the Resort District.

    “The Resort District was created to support tourism businesses. As a result, it is the largest single source of tax revenue for city services,” said Todd Ament, co-chairman of SOAR and president and CEO of the Anaheim Chamber of Commerce. “We will do what’s necessary to preserve this economic engine that funds vital services such as police and fire protection in Anaheim.”

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