"Historic Preservation is about managing change, not preventing it." ~ – Linda Dishman, L.A. Conservancy, quoted from L.A. Times, 07.10.10
 
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San Buenaventura Conservancy is co sponsoring a CPF workshop

with the Ventura Community Development Dept. 

The adaptively reused Watermark Restaurant

 

A professional Adaptive Reuse workshop

at Ventura City Hall. August 12, 2010

 

Prosperity Through Preservation - Adaptive Reuse as Economic Development Catalyst

This workshop is an advanced-level exploration of the complex planning and development factors that make historic adaptive reuse profitable for developers, and economically beneficial for communities. The day will include a ‘Nuts-and-Bolts’ moderated panel discussion of adaptive reuse from the preservationist’s, planner’s, and developer’s point of view. Topics include creating codes and planning for enhanced preservation, an examination of respectful reuse case studies , recognizing the wrong project, questioning the House Museum and Community Center model. The afternoon will focus on the weakest link in many adaptive projects... Preservation and development feasibly studies


FEASIBILITY ANALYSIS – Evaluating the Opportunities/Making Educated Decisions
  • Historic Architect’s Role
  • Structural Engineer’s Role
  • MEP Engineer’s Role
  • Cost Estimator’s Role
 
Explore how to evaluate project opportunities and make educated decisions when assessing adaptive reuse projects.

AIA & AICP credits available. For more info, sign up at

http://www.californiapreservation.org/


What's going on with the Top Hat? Click to find out the latest

San Buenaventura Conservancy Files Suit to Stop Wagon Wheel Demolition

click here to view the legal brief

4/10/09 L.A. TImes article goes in to detail about the why, what and who - read it here - NOW!


Welcome to the San Buenaventura Conservancy website. Please enjoy the histories, photos, landmarks and historic preservation tools we have gathered in our pages.

We look forward to your participation in our programs and events, and hope you become a member to help support the valuable historic and pre-historic landmarks in our area.


EIR Circulated in Port Hueneme to demolish 1885 McCoy Residence

EIR issues: insufficient analysis, insufficient mitigations, no archeological review, no aesthetic impact review, and EIR objectives do not accurately include the objective of productive future use of the site. Demolition and clearing of a valuable property is never the end-point objective. There should not be a rush to demolish our heritage just so that the city does not need to deal with vandalism and the homeless, and the building should be secured and stabilized until adaptive reuse can be initiated. 

The Conservancy believes this would be a perfect place for professional offices, or a small dental/medical office. Reuse into a restaurant to serve the PH residents that live on the beach blocks away could easily be facilitated by building a kitchen addition in the large rear yard with alley delivery and trash access. The lawn could easily be made into a landscaped outdoor seating deck under the tree. This would activate the street, and bring neighbors and tourists back to downtown in a far more positive way then the multi-story hotel that is being envisioned for the site. This front deck could easily include a ramp to solve ADA access challenges in the raised-floor building. Inside the historic hardwood floors could be refinished and seating could be accommodated under the tall original bay windows in the original living room and parlor. For more info, please click here.


Click here to download President Stephen Schafer's brochure advocating the preservation of the Wagon Wheel

If you would like, click on our donate form for donations to the Wagon Wheel Defense Fund. Links to the V C Reporter articles are here and here. Links to the LA Times article is here.

Oxnard (Summer 2010) – The San Buenaventura Conservancy filed suit against the City of Oxnard in the Ventura County Superior Court in early 2009. The suit claims that the City’s approval of the Oxnard Village Specific Plan on the site of Wagon Wheel Junction, violated the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA). Judge Glen Reiser ruled in favor of the City of Oxnard and the Village developers in Superior Court. The Conservancy filed an appeal in late 2009 with the 9th district court of Appeals. The case will wind its way through the appeals system over the next few months. The Conservancy hopes for a ruling that will require the Village to comply with CEQA and restore parts of the Wagon Wheel Motel and Restaurant as a Landmark.

The project proposes the demolition of the Wagon Wheel Restaurant and Motel, iconic examples of American mid-century roadside architecture. “This 64 acre project can be feasibly accomplished without demolition of the Wagon Wheel, and CEQA therefore does not allow the demolition,” said Conservancy President Stephen Schafer,“ The Conservancy did not take the prospect of suing the City of Oxnard lightly, but the rarity and regional importance of the Wagon Wheel merits its preservation for generations to come. We feel that razing the Wagon Wheel will be something that locals view with much regret, and that the concept of adaptive reuse of the buildings  – as farmers market, steakhouse, artist studios or tourism center – was always ignored in favor of demolition.”

 

The Wagon Wheel was built on the site of an old hog farm by Martin V. Smith in 1947. It was Smith’s first small real estate venture, but he would eventually become the most important developer in the history of Oxnard; creating much of Channel Islands Harbor, the Esplanade and Carriage Square shopping centers, Fisherman’s Wharf, and also the two towers at the Oxnard Financial Plaza.

 

The importance of the Wagon Wheel as an historic landmark on the 101 was made clear in numerous public comments submitted to the city by people from Oxnard and throughout the County and State who stressed the rarity and value of the Wagon Wheel as an authentic cultural landmark. The Oxnard Village Specific Plan is 64 acres surrounded by an 18 foot high concrete sound wall. “The Conservancy’s opinion is that the project can be successful and profitable for the developer and still carve out a little piece of land around the Wagon Wheel to celebrate Oxnard’s most iconic landmark and its most significant developer,” added Schafer. “We need to reverse the neglect that has happened to the Wagon Wheel since it was closed, and by applying the California Historic Building Code, the buildings can be restored to their mid-century heyday, like the Madonna Inn in San Luis Obispo.”The lawsuit requests issuance of a peremptory writ ordering the City to set aside its approval of the project pending compliance with CEQA.

The Wagon Wheel is one-of-a-kind Americana along the 101 freeway, one of the few iconic landmarks that Oxnard has left. Yes, it's in sad shape today due to neglect by the developer, but it can be revitalized into a community resource with a Farmers Market, playgrounds, community center, swimming pool and a real American steakhouse all housed in the authentically restored, western-themed Wagon Wheel. No more motel, no more eyesore; just a gleaming preservation of the neon-trimmed buildings that millions of travelers have grown accustomed to seeing through the 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, and the 90s. The Conservancy believes this location is important not only to the community of Oxnard but also the citizens of Ventura County as well as commuters and even one-time tourists; once it is demolished there is no second chance, it will be gone permanently.

The Conservancy is in support of the majority of the Village Specific Plan and in no way wants to impede the development, but a small number of listed historic resources will be demolished as a consequence of the new European-themed mixed-use project called the "Oxnard Village." A win-win scenario that would allow for preservation of the Wagon Wheel AND a profitable Oxnard Village development was not properly considered during the planning process (a violation of the California Environmental Quality Act). The Conservancy believes that The Village can be even more successful if less than three acres of the 64 acre project was revitalized to its authentic mid-century appeal. Restoring and enhancing a few of the original Wagon Wheel structures that Martin V. Smith created in the late 1940s.

The Conservancy sees the beautifully restored Wagon Wheel as a visual landmark on the 101, just like in the 1950s when the western-themed buildings and animated horse-and-buckboard neon sign served as a visual icon and lured travelers off the freeway. There's a Starbucks, Burger King and Holiday Inn at every off ramp; but real, authentic landmarks like this are rare, they're only found in America, and they are disappearing fast. The preservation of the Wagon Wheel is an opportunity to restore a world-famous destination, with an authentic Steakhouse and reuse the old motel units as artists studios, a farmers market, an educational facility, neighborhood stores, or perhaps a community center. Recreating the 'tough' motel of the last decade will not enhance the site. However, adaptive reuse of historic buildings does not require that the site be a motel. For example, the landmark Oxnard Carnegie Library isn't a library anymore, and the historic homes in Heritage Square looked even shabbier when moved, and they are now offices, restaurants, and a theater. The Conservancy envisions the restored site becoming a real magnet in the region and an amenity for the residents of the Village, creating a walkable, park-like destination between the high-rise towers and the 5 story townhomes. It will be at the center of the walking trail around the perimeter of the 64 acre development, some of the motel grounds could be used as open-space and the pool could again be used for swimming lessons like it did in years past. Much of this can be paid for with rehabilitation tax credits and preservation grants.

An unprecedented number of EIR comment letters from all over the country were submitted illustrating the need to retain and restore the historic Wagon Wheel to its former glory as a destination location and visual landmark. The Project Proponent has always maintained that – despite findings to the contrary by the Oxnard Cultural Heritage Board and historians hired to assess the site for the EIR – the Wagon Wheel needed to be demolished. The property has rapidly decayed as a result of its closure, (unlike the busy Bowling Alley next door) but the Conservancy contends that the simple frame buildings could be easily restored by adopting the California Historic Building Code. A small parcel containing the Motel and Restaurant could become a shining example of mid-century, themed roadside Americana and the entrepreneurial spirit of Martin V. Smith, Oxnard's most significant developer. If Oxnard allows the demolition of the historic Wagon Wheel they will have no historic landmarks from the 1940's or Martin V. Smith left, since Smith's first restaurant the Colonial House, was demolished 19 years ago, and has yet to be developed into the then-promised redevelopment project.

The Conservancy's concern was summed up best by Martin V. Smith in a 1991 LA Times article, when he was quoted saying, "I live here. I'd hate to see this area become like Orange County around the John Wayne Airport." People wishing to comment on the Wagon Wheel Junction preservation should contact the following publications and organizations:

 

The San Buenaventura Conservancy partnered with the Committee of Descendents of Ventura County Pioneers Prior to 1874 to facilitate the relocation of the Pioneer Plaque monument from the Museum of Ventura County to the Ventura County Government Center. Originally dedicated in 1934 at Foster Park, the 14 ton Boulder with two bronze plaques attached was moved to a prominent place in front of the Ventura County Museum of History and Art in 1999. Now that the Museum is expanding, a new site was needed, and the Ventura County Board of Supervisors voted to display this historic monument to our early pioneers on the south lawn of the Government Center.

The Plaques and boulder were lifted from their site at the Museum on Tuesday January 3, 2009. The move is being funded by donations from pioneer families, businesses and the public. The historic monument was placed the south lawn near the corner of Victoria and Telephone Road on Saturday February 28th. We look forward to seeing you at the re- dedication ceremony on April 11, 2009 at 9:15 am on the south lawn of the Ventura County Government Center. Refreshments will be served. Tax deductible donations are needed. For more info call Jim Roberts at 805-643-4700. Donation checks can be made payable to the San Buenaventura Conservancy (a non-profit preservation organization) and mailed to the attention: Pioneer Plaque Fund, C/O San Buenaventura Conservancy, PO Box 23263, Ventura CA 93002

Thank you to the volunteers and contractors that made the move possible!

Chris Lyon of C.D. Lyon Construction

Todd Holder of T & T Truck and Crane
Ron Hill of Sam Hill & Sons Construction Ken Slaughter of Trench Shoring
Jason Schaffer of Sunbelt Rentals Rick Taylor of Taylor's Truck and Crane
Katie Deutschman of Turtle Type Steve Offerman, Jim Roberts, and Dick Adams

The Ventura County Supervisors and Steve Bennett for accepting the Pioneer Plaques!


Take our on-line survey and volunteer opportunities questionnaire. Click here !