To the editor: The Venice Dell mission was first conceived in 2016 (“In Venice Beach, it’s taken nearly a decade to not build low-income housing,” Feb. 15). The mission would supply 120 items of housing for low-income and homeless folks on a city-owned parking zone. The mission was accredited by the California Coastal Fee and twice by the Los Angeles Metropolis Council.
Many people in the neighborhood have voiced sturdy help quite a few instances. However Metropolis Atty. Hydee Feldstein-Soto and Councilmember Traci Park (beginning earlier than she was even elected) selected to viciously oppose and impede this much-needed housing.
Because the Venice Household Clinic’s Venice Artwork Stroll chair for 25 years, I’m most appreciative of the brand new everlasting housing items that will probably be put aside for low-income artists, as a result of Venice artists are an excellent reward to our group and plenty of have been compelled out by gentrification.
Because the mission’s proposal, the primary difficulty decried by some (talked about by columnist Robin Abcarian) was the “look.” A brand new structure agency was engaged to deal with their considerations.
As now designed, the Venice Dell mission shouldn’t be larger than adjoining buildings and has a delicate new look with wood siding. The constructing now suits nicely into the Venice panorama.
I want to know if, with these changes, the true drawback isn’t actually “the look,” however some neighbors simply don’t need “these folks” to proceed to reside on this group.
Sheila Goldberg, Venice
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To the editor: It’s not solely native officers who oppose the Venice Dell mission. Many, many Venice residents oppose it as nicely.
Listed here are the issues: It would value $1 million per unit, with 120 proposed items. It’s in a tsunami zone (no getting round that). It would not less than quickly displace households, with a four-unit advanced needing to be torn down. And though the architect is legendary, the mission, with its brutalist fashion, doesn’t match into the neighborhood.
Venice, being an epicenter of the homeless drawback, does want housing for the homeless. However this isn’t the reply.
Mindy Taylor-Ross, Venice
