KEEP THE WOODBRIDGE VILLAGE CENTER, IRVINE!

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This discussion topic has been automatically created of petition KEEP THE WOODBRIDGE VILLAGE CENTER, IRVINE!.

Lisha

#176 Great place

2014-10-03 07:01

I love this place. A lot of memories from when I was a kid. We don't need more new buildings. I still go there today.


Guest

#177

2014-10-03 12:30

What are we going to do in irvine if there are only homes?

Guest

#178

2014-10-03 13:38

We don't need more apartments or homes, please stop it Irvine Company.

Guest

#179

2014-10-03 13:58

Irvine is already filled with houses and streets! Leave some fun before everyone leaves!

Guest

#180

2014-10-03 14:30

We love the Woodbridge center! Please save this legendary Irvine landmark!

Guest

#181

2014-10-03 15:49

Save the center!!!

Guest

#182

2014-10-03 18:01

please do no destroy our peaceful Irvine. It is already being inundated with apartment buildings and traffic, traffic, traffic. It used to be a peaceful community. How much profit do you need to make?

Guest

#183

2014-10-03 18:02

too much high density and traffic already

Guest

#184

2014-10-03 18:41

Please keep our Woodbridge Village Center in place this is a wonderful family center and we would like to keep it that way.

We don't need additional housing in Woodbridge it is crowded enough!

Guest

#185

2014-10-03 18:45

We moved to this area because we enjoyed the family community feel and would like it to stay this way, we have plenty of housing already!

Guest

#186

2014-10-03 18:49

Too many good things here to let it go. The whole plaza is amazing.

Guest

#187 Re: el cholo

2014-10-03 20:36

#156: Broso74 -  

 probably Chase bank they have one on ever corner!!


Guest

#188

2014-10-03 20:59

Remove choi
Irvineredident

#189 Oh please

2014-10-04 22:35

just stop it irvine company.  I talk to a lot of business owners who want to stay and they tell me the irv company hikes up their leases or doesn't want to renew it because they just don't feel like having them around.  You guys know they purposely leave Woodbridge like that so they can give the appearance that business is bad there

 

 

 Vote Evan chembers   No more high density housing


Guest

#190

2014-10-05 02:53

That center needs to stay. Enough apartment buildings already!

Guest

#191

2014-10-05 13:28

When we moved to Woodbridge, 26 years ago, they called them the "Villages of Irvine" and Woodbridge VILLAGE Center was the focal point for shopping and gathering for dinner, or coffee. Many Halloween celebrations were there.
Irvine Company has expert marketing teams who should be able to figure this out. Many times I come, and the parking lot is packed. PEOPLE ARE USING THE CENTER!

Guest

#192 Re: Oh please

2014-10-05 13:29

#189: Irvineredident - Oh please 

 I SO AGREE WITH YOU !!!!!!!!! WELL SAID>

This post has been removed by its writer (Show details)

2014-10-05 13:31



Guest

#194

2014-10-05 20:43

Please stop the construction
lisa

#195

2014-10-06 00:06

KEEP THE WOODBRIDGE CENTER OPEN FOR MORE GENERATIONS TO ENJOY


Guest

#196

2014-10-06 18:47

I lived in Northwood for 27 years and moved in 2010 but spend a huge amount of time still in Irvine and this area. This is ridiculous. What next??

Guest

#197

2014-10-06 20:03

The place is my kid's childhood hometown and all beautiful memories are still there!

Guest

#198

2014-10-07 04:43

Down with corporate greed!
Up with people!

Guest

#199

2014-10-07 04:57

Seriously?! Does Irvine really need more apartments? NO!

Guest

#200

2014-10-08 01:10

1) A central place for cell towers. Badly needed, and will pay well, but no one wants one nearby, so put them there where no one lives, works or shops much now. Perhaps at the top of the lake bridges or gazebos.

2) An Airstream community. Most parts of the country, but not California, have an upscale RV park in which there are homes with garages big enough and tall enough to park an RV. The size and accommodations on the rest of such homes vary in such parks, with some being little more than a screen house with a laundry room and bath, and others being more like mansions. I'd suggest some of each in the same community, as exists in such places as the North Texas Airstream Community South of Dallas. That way there's no eyesore factor, and still handles folks with varying needs for space and varying budgets. At the very least, there should be a housing option able to take a tall Mercedes Benz RV in its garage, since there's no place else in Irvine one can be legally parked overnight except at Irvine RV Storage, and it can't be stayed in overnight there.

3) Micro homes, such as a San Diego company makes. These are luxurious, but only a few hundred square feet in size. Frankly, I think this is all the generation now graduating from college will be able to afford for decades to come.

4) A walkable and bikeable development. The Wall Street Journal recently featured such a place in Colorado in its Mansions section. The houses were the usual huge monstrosities, but with great walking and biking amenities. I'd suggest doing the same, without the McMansions. Make the goal be to have a neighborhood that holds lots of new people without increasing automobile traffic at all. That could look a lot like one we've seen in Bloomington IN, but doesn't have to be only for old folks. It could also be very green, and designed to use very little water, which would please environmentalists.

Hopefully, unlike that one, it would include shops in easy walking distance for such things as buying fresh fruits and vegetables, bread and meat daily - like a 7-11, but healthy and not car-oriented.

5) Multi-generational homes. There was one in a recent OC Register homes section that is intentionally designed to include two related families, living near each other on the same lot, but still separate enough for individual lives. This might be something like combining a regular Irvine home and a microhome on the same lot. I understand CA law now requires this to be permitted, so why not build for it intentionally? It would handle either a second young family that can't afford a big house yet, or a second older family that no longer needs a big house.

In chatting with a retired Irvine architect, he pointed out part of the appeal of Irvine is that it is high density housing that doesn't FEEL high density due to careful positioning of each home for privacy from neighbors and best use of its limited lot size.

I notice that most of the candidates for council are anti-high-density. That would have locked us out of moving here, along with most everyone else not in the top 5% of income and wealth. Personally, I wouldn't like an Irvine filled with the McMansions that were becoming common in Arlington Heights IL where we used to live, yet that is about all that seems to be being built now other than apartment buildings.

With CA in the tough shape it is, and with prospects for a good economy for anyone other than the 1% ever dimmer, there's much to be said for doing something positive now about ever-growing debt that our kids' and grandkids' generation will otherwise have to pay back.