Plan for Newport Beach’s first public pool located on the harbor
Source – MSN.com
Original Story by Erika I. Ritchie, The Orange County Register
A public swimming pool complex to include a 50-meter pool, a therapy pool, a splash pad and a building for events is moving closer to reality and could become the city’s next successful public-private partnership.
Recently, the Newport Beach City Council approved a change to the city’s general plan that allows the area at Lower Castaways Park to be zoned for development and accommodate the facility.

The Newport Beach City Council is moving forward on plans to build a 9,000-square-foot building, 50-meter pool, therapy pool, splash pad, hand boat launch, and event venue at Lower Castaways Park in Newport Beach, CA. Traffic on Coast Highway moves over Newport Bay on Friday, Nov. 22, 2024. © Paul Bersebach/The Orange County Register/TNS
“It’s the birthplace of Newport Beach; it’s where they first came into the harbor,” Councilmember Joe Stapleton, who is passionate about seeing the approximately $47 million project go through, said about the Castaways location. “It’s the first landing spot when they discovered Newport Harbor. It’s such a shame that the founding spot of our city has essentially been a vacant storage lot.”

A rendering of what the public pool complex proposed at Lower Castaways Park would look like from the bay side. It would include a place to launch paddleboards and such. (Courtesy of the city of Newport Beach)
Located along Dover Drive and Pacific Coast Highway, the 4-acre property is mostly used to stage the city’s construction vehicles, store boats and for access to Back Bay. It’s also the city’s last undeveloped parcel adjacent to the bay.
The vote to rezone the area for what city officials say will be a public-private partnership follows multiple meetings by a city ad-hoc committee and a City Council study session held in October, during which all seven members raised their hands in support in an informal poll.
At that time, council members also approved money for architects and engineers to consider the project’s design. Other ideas from the community for what to do with the land had included an aquarium – an idea floated by two harbor commissioners – or an educational center.
Now that councilmembers have given the first steps their OK, the project will require at least a year of study and permitting and that will include extensive public input, officials said. They said construction could start in the winter of 2026 and be completed by spring 2028.
The pool would be the city’s first. Recreational programs are held in pools shared with the Newport Mesa Unified School District. But officials said the schedule there is already jam-packed with competitive school events, and programming has suffered because there is not enough time for both uses.
“When you think about Newport Beach, the world-class athletes, the swimmers, the water polo players, they’ve had to go outside the city to compete in anything,” Stapleton said.
The centerpiece of the swim complex would be a 50-meter pool suitable for lap swimming, year-round swim lessons, and a water polo league, among other uses.
There would also be a heated therapy pool that would provide opportunities for senior therapy programs, water aerobics, aqua yoga, and injury rehabilitation programs. The center would also include a 360-square-foot splash pad. The complex would house meeting rooms and there would be a place for launching kayaks and other human-powered vessels.
“I just want to create a world-class venue where people can enjoy the aquatic nature of Newport Beach,” Stapleton said. “So people don’t have to go out of town for swimming, for water polo, lessons and therapy. This splash pad for toddlers, we’re kind of touching all ages here, from newborns to legacy members of our community who are looking for therapy. It’s a good opportunity to showcase the aquatic nature of our city.”
It is estimated it would cost about $1.5 million a year to operate the facility.
Stapleton said the project will be a public-private partnership like the Newport Library Lecture Hall now under construction and the Newport Beach Junior Lifeguard building that opened this summer.
“The most important thing about this is that it’s a public-private partnership,” Stapleton said. “The reality is this is going to be funded 50% from the city and 50% from the community. We’ve got a lot of people that are really excited by this. It’s just a great opportunity.”
Source – MSN.com
Original Story by Erika I. Ritchie, The Orange County Register
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The Newport Beach City Council approved an agreement with a firm for federal advocacy services related to harbor dredging efforts and programs, Feb. 27. Carpi & Clay was retained to represent Newport Beach at the federal level in hopes the firm would help bring the city’s issues to the forefront when it comes to harbor dredging.
“The city has been actively working with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers … and to a limited extent, federal elected representatives, to present and educate them on our dredging needs in Newport Harbor, as well as to get our project on the Corps’ upcoming project funding list,” city staff told council members in a report. “Keeping our project in focus and on the recommended funding list of both the Corps and the many elected representatives that need to review and approve it is, and continues to be, a significant challenge particularly because we do not have a presence in Washington, D.C.”
An Army Corps study in 2017 revealed there is about 650,000 cubic yards of sediment remaining in federal waters and must be dredged to “maintain adequate navigation.”
By Devon Warren
Inventor of the electric Duffy boat addresses his plans to improve the Newport Beach Harbor as city’s new mayor.
NEWPORT BEACH — In the efforts to track down Marshall “Duffy” Duffield, the new mayor of Newport Beach, it seemed quite ominous his reply to an email correspondence about scheduling an interview stated, “I’m around,” with his phone number attached.
The Duffy name is certainly “around” in many corners of Newport Beach Harbor, as it’s literally everywhere you turn – in the form of a “Duffy” electric boat.
As a long-time Newport Beach resident (more than 50 years) and the inventor of the electric boat bearing his name, many of us would consider Duffield the quintessential image of the dreamy Southern California yachting life.
A car insurance agent once told me we pay such catastrophic prices because “it’s a privilege to live” in Southern California. In a lot of ways, Duffield has taken such privilege and created an empire from it – him, and most other residents of California’s coast, live in a Technicolor world of scenic beauty that others across the country may never see in their lifetimes.
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