Santa Cruz Good Times

Tuesday
Feb 09th
  • Login
    Username . . . . . . . . . . . . Password Log in to post comments, add Community Calendar events & get access to web-exclusive content. Welcome!
  • Create an account
    Registration
    *
    *
    *
    *
    *
    Fields marked with an asterisk (*) are required.
Text size
  • Increase font size
  • Default font size
  • Decrease font size
Good Times Home Santa Cruz SC History Looking Back Looking Ahead-Remembering Loma

Looking Back Looking Ahead-Remembering Loma

The 1989 Loma Prieta Earthquake may have shaken Santa Cruz to the core, but it did one thing and one thing very well—it brought the community together. Here, GT probes the minds of several well-known Cruzans to get a better perspective of how things unravelled back then and … what may lie ahead. (Pictured: Mark Primack on a piece of the old Cooper House.)coverLBLAMarkPrimack

What do you remember most? With my family safe and our home secure, I walked the length of Pacific Avenue a half hour after the earthquake. As an architect and Zoning Board Chair, I felt compelled to attempt my own assessment of damages. I didn’t have a camera, so I tried hard to take indelible mental notes on the apparent condition of each building I passed. Those first impressions informed later efforts at housing displaced businesses and saving older buildings. It is those white-knuckled images of cracked and battered buildings that come most clearly to mind when I remember the ’89 quake.

Best actions and visions that came out of that time? Two mornings after the earthquake, an ad hoc group of city commissioners and business people—perhaps a dozen in all—gathered at the Children’s Art Foundation on Cedar Street to discuss options. The next day we began talks with the representative of the company that manufactured the pavilions that would house our downtown businesses (some for the next five years). By the next week, volunteer realtors were drawing up leases for participating businesses and volunteer architects were space planning each pavilion for retailers and restaurateurs. A week after that, union construction workers erected 75,000 square feet of sales space in one weekend and local artists began printing custom holiday wrapping paper. The pavilions opened for business the day after Thanksgiving and merchants there had their best year ever. A month after the earthquake, downtown Santa Cruz had proven it could save itself. After that it was just bricks and mortar. And, this time, rebar.

Two mornings after the earthquake, an ad hoc group gathered to discuss options ... The next day we began talks with the representative of the company that manufactured the pavilions that would house our downtown businesses.

Your vision for Santa Cruz for the next 20 years? Disasters have a way of exposing the shallowness of political power while measuring the true depth of a community’s generosity and compassion. For me there were no surprises in ’89 on either count. The good people of Santa Cruz planned and then rebuilt their downtown during a prolonged recession. The people led and the leaders followed. The universal need for recovery swept aside all the divisive forces; cooperation, tolerance and compassion prevailed. My vision, or I should say my hope for Santa Cruz, is that we continue that recovery and grow into a creative, open, just and generous community that will truly reflect the spirit of this place.
Mark Primack
Architect

coverLBLA2CoonNeal Coonerty
Owner Bookshop Santa Cruz

Coonerty (second from left) back in the day. Here, after losing his business to the quake, the revered Bookshop Santa Cruz owner makes plans where to place bookshelves in his new home in the pavilion.

When you think about the ’89 earthquake, what do you remember most? The building that Bookshop Santa Cruz leased was severely damaged in the earthquake. When the city finally allowed us 48 hours to remove our inventory and fixtures it meant the difference of Bookshop surviving or not. The building was still dangerous, and the city required everyone who would enter the old bookshop to save the books and fixtures to sign a waiver that spelled out that they might die if an aftershock caused the building to collapse. And that the city would not put rescue workers in harm’s way to get anyone out of the rubble. I went on KUSP the night before asking for volunteers to help save Bookshop but also carefully explaining the danger and the waiver. At 8 a.m. the next morning my wife and I went down to the Bookshop expecting a few people who might help us pull books out of the store. As we came down the hill on Mission [Street] we saw 400 people lined up ready to don hardhats and sign waivers to help save Bookshop Santa Cruz. We were literally saved by our friends and customers. I still get emotional when I think of that day 20 years ago when our community saved our dream.


$1 Billion-That’s the amount of money Loma created in public and private property damage in the county.
Bay Area total: More than $6 billion. Considered the most costly natural disaster in U.S. history at the time.


What were the best actions and visions that came out of that time? In the long and sometimes slow process of planning to rebuild downtown Santa Cruz, the Vision Santa Cruz committee did so much right. We were facing a destroyed commercial area at a time of a national recession and many cooler heads felt that downtown Santa Cruz might never rebuild. For example, we were faced with the problem that new construction meant much higher commercial rents, so how could we plan for that need? We decided we would rebuild to make the retail day extend into the evening to allow merchants to pick up more sales. Before the quake, fewer than a dozen businesses were open past 6 p.m. and many closed on Sundays. In order to stretch the retail day we widened sidewalks and encouraged sidewalk cafe tables for restaurants. We worked to attract a cinema complex on Pacific [Avenue] and rebuild the Del Mar Theatre. We made sure the streetscape and lighting made people comfortable. And it all worked. Today Pacific Avenue is almost as busy in the evening as it is during the day.

As we came down the hill on Mission we saw 400 people lined up ready to don hardhats and sign waivers to help save Bookshop Santa Cruz. We were literally saved by our friends and customers.

What is your vision for Santa Cruz for the next 20 years? Downtown Santa Cruz is the retail and commercial heart of Santa Cruz but it has always been about more than just the exchange of money for goods and services. It is where we hold our community parades, where political tabling happens, where we display our architectural history, where our civic life goes on, where kids come in their Halloween costumes to trick or treat, and where people bump into friends and neighbors and catch up on each other’s lives. We need to keep downtown Santa Cruz alive in that fuller role it plays in our community. It needs to continue to be that third place (other than where you live and work) where community happens. And we need to also keep downtown Santa Cruz a happy and healthy retail neighborhood. My final wish is that people stop making downtown Santa Cruz a political football: if you don’t like it, stay away and shut up; if you like it come on down and enjoy downtown Santa Cruz like thousands of us do.

 


cover_LBLAWilliamRubleWilliam Rubel
Former Chair, Downtown Commission

What do you remember most? Besides the earthquake itself, my most vivid memory is Pacific Avenue. The street was a chaotic [mess] of broken trees and litter from shattered storefronts and fallen facades. Dust was still in the air; it was eerily silent. My second memory is of the following night eating dinner in my backyard with friends who worked at Bookshop Santa Cruz. I recall thinking, ‘My friends have no job! Nobody working on Pacific Avenue has a job!’ And the thought then came to me—let’s put the businesses in tents. I was chair of the Downtown Commission and we oversaw parking. Thus, we had parking lots, but no cars to park in them. As soon as I thought of this tent idea, I mentioned it to my friends, got up from the table, and made a couple calls. The next day I convened the Downtown Commission and we set the tent idea in motion. No business failed; they were all able to relocate back onto Pacific Avenue when reconstruction was complete.

Best actions and visions that came out of that time? The best actions were the first actions, the parking-lot tents, the University lecture series organized by Jim Pepper that introduced the community to big ideas about city planning that made us better able to participate in the many community planning meetings that were part of the rebuilding process, and the hiring of the internationally renowned Roma Design Group to plan the downtown. These actions were unqualified successes. As bureaucratic as it sounds, the best summation of the best vision that came out of the earthquake is the Downtown Recovery Plan. It is a complex and decisive plan that addressed a complex problem and was adopted without opposition at a hearing so large it had to take place at the Civic Auditorium. The plan was a popular plan that, in reality, not just rhetorically, reflected the vision of the entire Santa Cruz community—left, right, center, student, and longtime resident. The best vision is that when we feel the urgency, the citizens and leaders of our community can come together to solve a complex problem.


I recall thinking, ‘My friends have no job! Nobody working on Pacific Avenue has a job!’ And the thought then came to me—let’s put the businesses in tents.

Your vision for Santa Cruz for the next 20 years? I will rephrase the question a little. My vision for Santa Cruz in 20 years is a community that learned its own mind and with a single voice developed the planning framework to make Santa Cruz the best city it can be. This is in contrast to a city that mostly allows time and events happen to it, and says ‘no’ more readily than ‘yes.’ My own vision is of a city that recognizes it is a city and then decides to be more of a city by radically increasing the density of its downtown core. Density is green. Density is also what makes great cities great by providing the captive market for the restaurants, cultural institutions, and specialty shops that makes cities interesting places to live in and visit. In my vision, the denser downtown would be fully integrated with the beach area.    
As a concrete example of what I mean by a city that purposefully creates its own future, it is one in which, in 20 years, offices downtown are filled with businesses from a mix of industries that builds on our community’s interests. Thus, in addition to software firms locating here because we are conveniently adjacent to Silicon Valley, it would be filled with firms that build on and reinforce the interests that many of us have in natural foods, alternative medicine, bicycles, skateboards, surfboards, and in organic agriculture. This would be true because the community formally articulated what kinds of businesses it wanted to see downtown, and then the city and private sector took active steps to solicit tenants regionally and nationally. My vision for Santa Cruz is a city with enlightened leadership in both the public and private sector working with all of us to create a better place for those of us who study here, live here permanently, and who come to visit, if only for a day.

 


cover_LBLAJohnHuffmanJohn Huffman
Former Rotary Club President

What do you remember most? When I think about the ’89 earthquake, what I remember the most was the quake-damaged buildings in the six block stretch of the Pacific Garden Mall, [and how they] were surrounded by a chain-link fence, instead of shoppers, as demolition crews moved in to tear down damaged buildings—especially the turn-of-the century Cooper House, which was the first building to be demolished.

What were the best actions and visions that came out of that time? I was President of the Rotary Club of Santa Cruz in 1989-90, so for me the best actions and visions were meeting the challenges of responding to the needs of our community. Our Club regrouped and decided to establish a Rotary Disaster Relief Fund to provide financial support and assistance to help business merchants re-open and re-establish small business in downtown Santa Cruz.  For example, at the request of the Downtown Association, we funded $8,000 for the Aftershock Entryway Project that assisted approximately 40 businesses in downtown Santa Cruz be relocated into the pavilions (tents).  By the end of my Rotary year, our club had provided over $65,000 in financial support and assistance to our community.

My vision for Santa Cruz for the next 20 years is a plan to link the San Lorenzo River to the rest of downtown Santa Cruz. Create opportunities for riverfront promenades.

Your vision for Santa Cruz for the next 20 years? My vision for Santa Cruz for the next 20 years is a plan to link the San Lorenzo River to the rest of downtown Santa Cruz.  Create opportunities for riverfront promenades and new frontages for commercial and residential buildings on the west side of the river.


cover_LBLACeilCirilloCeil Cirillo
Former Head of the Redevelopment Agency

What do you remember most?
I was not a member of the Santa Cruz community prior to the earthquake but after I arrived in February 1990, I remember the coming together of community. I was surprised at how many  properties were owned by people who were not developers and thus were inexperienced in dealing with the development process.  A great number of them did not have earthquake insurance so it was critical for the local lenders to step in and help in the rebuilding process.  Coast Commercial Bank led the effort under Harvey Nickelson’s leadership, who also played a key role in the visioning process as a member of Vision Santa Cruz.  The response to the devastation from around the country was overwhelming—with donations coming in through the American Red Cross.  The U.S. Department of Commerce stepped in with funds for the rebuilding planning process and ultimately with grants for two significant projects in the downtown area—the Locust Street Garage and the Museum of Art & History project—which were very supportive to the vision for downtown. And, of course, the initiative which ultimately brought me to Santa Cruz—the activation of its Redevelopment Agency, which the City Manager, Dick Wilson, recommended as a necessary tool to assist in the rebuilding.

Best actions and visions that came out of that time? I believe that the best actions and visions that came out of the time were the combinations of the elements of the old “Pacific Garden Mall” that the community loved, and recommendations in the Downtown Recovery Plan to redevelop Pacific Avenue as the social, specialty retail, entertainment and cultural center of the County.  

My vision ... strong linkages to the beach area, the Tannery Arts Center, the Marine Sanctuary Visitors Center and the Long Marine/Seymour Center.

Your vision for Santa Cruz for the next 20 years? My vision is that the downtown will have an active weekday, daytime population with the upper levels of the office buildings alive with the vibrancy of office tenants as well as a residential community that supports the restaurants and retailers and entertainment venues.  I also envision the downtown becoming the beneficiary of the creativity being bred at the university, and that it will be manifested in the incubation of businesses as a result of the programs being offered by the university and its entrepreneurial students.  This could also be supported if the university offered an MBA program locally. An additional presence to the downtown would be a satellite Cabrillo campus.  
The old Pacific Avenue at its prime had a number of hotels that were ultimately converted to housing.  My vision would be for the return of a downtown business hotel as well as strong linkages to the beach area, the Tannery Arts Center, the Marine Sanctuary Visitors Center and the Long Marine/Seymour Center. It’s all possible over the next 20-year period.

Comments (0)Add Comment

Write comment

busy
 

More Good Times

 

New Lagoon

UCSC’s Natural Reserve System works to restore Younger Lagoon It’s a beautiful, mild mid-December day and Gage Dayton is standing on a gently sloping hill overlooking Younger Lagoon, a natural reserve site, as he looks politely, if a bit sternly, at a surfer. The surfer, a man in his early twenties clad in a black hooded wetsuit, is, for his part, looking both embarrassed and uncomfortable; he’s in a distinctly awkward spot, positioned several feet off the ground, halfway over a fence. His two friends, also clad in wetsuits and clutching their surfboards, are standing behind him, looking similarly abashed. “No hopping here, guys,” Dayton says mildly. “Sorry. This is a reserve.” The surfers haven’t moved; they look at him a bit skeptically. “The UC Santa Cruz police have actually been starting to patrol down here, unfortunately,” he adds.

 

Out of Reach

I used to dream of winning the lottery so that I could one day buy a house in Santa Cruz—one of the nation’s most desirable and expensive coastal markets. But my last search for a local rental was a wake-up call. First, my prospective roommate called about the marijuana operation he wanted to start in the back shed. Yes, the landlord was cool with it, and permits would be obtained. No, I wasn’t interested, but I appreciated the info—it would have been a sad discovery to make after moving in. Better to stay away and save my $1,600 deposit and $850 in rent—an amount that would make a monthly house payment on a decent property in my hometown of Salt Lake City, Utah. 

 

Is the economy on the road to recovery or ruin?

Santa Cruz | Bartender

 

From the Editor

How often do you use your car, even if it’s just to go down the block to get a last-minute grocery item? There’s a strong chance that many of us use our automobiles far more than necessary, which brings us to this week’s cover story and an interesting question: Are you addicted to using your car as your only means of transportation? I admit it. I may be an addict. (Hi, my name is Greg and I’m a car-aholic ... it’s a convertible—it’s too low to the damn ground and God knows why I still have it—but yes, yes, I think I’m addicted to using it, and only it, as my single method of getting around!) We may all be in the same boat, so peruse this week’s cover story by Elizabeth Limbach, and dive into our pullout (“Commute Solutions”) to learn the myriad ways you can be making a difference environmentally by using sustainable transportation. And it’s not just about being “green”—although, isn’t “blue” the new green? It’s about making better choices all around—for your own health and the health of the planet we live on.

 

Memory Matters

Twenty years after the fact, a geologist and a historian say we must not forget “Loma Prieta was a humbling experience for most of us. a reminder of our diminutive stature in the grand scheme of things. I think that remembering events like that is a perfect antidote for our collective hubris; it keeps us honest.” —Sandy Lydon, ‘History Dude’  

 

Music Calendar

Live Music This Week Check out the latest hot concert picks happening around town. See more area activities on our events page >  

 

‘Making a Record’

This week we’re highlighting the debut of a new workshop aimed at helping your local band—and anyone curious about what it takes to bust out a record. Helmed by Gadgetbox Studios’ Andy Zenczak, in partnership with Santa Cruz Rehearsal Studios, the “Making a Record” roundtable discussion on Thursday, Feb. 11, is presenting the varied expertise and industry experience of local stars Lauren Shera, Naomi Wilder (Naomi & The Courteous Rude Boys), Peter Haworth (Molly’s Revenge), and Brian Gallagher (Wooster). “Major labels are dying a slow death and it’s about time for independent resources to pick up and give artists more exposure,” says Zenczak, a self-described “music-geek and science-geek” who combined his two passions when he first started recording bands in his home 10 years ago.

 

I.V. League

Israel Vibration’s Lascelle “Wiss” Bulgin gives GT a shot of positive energy I’m talking with one of the most respected reggae artists alive … and I can’t understand a word he’s saying. Between Israel Vibration vocalist Lascelle “Wiss” Bulgin’s thick Jamaican accent, a fuzzy cell phone reception, and the din of a lively entourage in the background, what we’re getting here does not resemble “information” in the conventional sense. As far as sonic Rorschach tests go, though, it’s first-rate stuff.

 

Santa Cruz Area Events

Events this Week Need something to do? Read about what events are not to be missed. Also see our area featured music page >

 

A Night To Remember

There’s enough fun, flavor and festive food at 515 Kitchen & Cocktails to keep you engaged for hours Oh, these are crispy balls of ginger goodness.” Now, I was certain somebody at the dinner table uttered that statement. I just could not recall which one of us did. There were three of us at a recent visit to 515 Kitchen and Cocktails and you see, it’s the latter part of the moniker of the popular Santa Cruz restaurant that must have gotten us all into some (good) trouble. “Cocktails.” Well, in this case it was a bottle of 2008 Byron Pinot Noir from Santa Maria Valley, estate bottled and loads of fun for the palate—an embraceable treat with hints of anise, black cherries and Asian spices. Did we imagine the smoky vanilla?

 

Hallcrest Vineyards Pinot Noir 2005

Hallcrest Vineyards has been around for a long time. Nestled on a hill in the town of Felton, it was originally a retreat in the late 1800s for the Hall family, who actually planted the Hallcrest Estate vineyard. The on-site winery, which was started in 1945, is still in use today. When releasing its first wine in 1946, it was one of only three vineyards in the Santa Cruz Mountains. Today, there are about 70 wineries belonging to the Santa Cruz Mountains Winegrowers Association (SCMWA) – with new ones springing up all the time.

 

Mad Mel

Gibson back with a vengeance in 'Edge of Darkness' Mel Gibson has never been one of those chameleon actors who disappears into a role. Even in Braveheart (especially in Braveheart), viewers could never forget they were watching Mel Gibson painted blue. Since Gibson's career has always been about persona, it's interesting to see how that persona is evolving in the political thriller, Edge Of Darkness, Gibson's first onscreen role in eight years. Physically, more lined and craggy than we remember, and smaller, even shorter on camera, his demeanor seems more humble and contained, less flamboyant. This conservative, paternal approach befits his character here, a blue-collar police detective searching for the murderer of his grown daughter. But there's one aspect of Gibson's persona that has not altered over the years: ever since Braveheart, he's been drawn to playing the martyr, the stoic hero who suffers mightily for the sins of the rest of us. Gibson's martyr complex isn't so much of a problem at first in Edge Of Darkness; clues begin to add up, suspense builds, the action is fast, visceral and violent. It's not until the last quarter of the film that logic and dignity are tossed aside and we're invited to wallow in the character's pain and bow down to our wrathful, rampaging avenger.

 

In Slow We Trust

A walk with Dr. Wallace J. Nichols illuminates the Slow Coast Movement, the ‘long now’ and what's really in a name We all know the area. That long stretch of Highway 1 that weaves along the cliffs, between hills, forests and farmland beginning just north of Santa Cruz at Wilder Ranch and ending south of Half Moon Bay just past San Gregorio. It's a region of undeniable beauty and tangible calm. A place where time seems to move a little slower, perhaps on an older more natural cycle. A certain Dr. Wallace 'J' Nichols, his partner Dana Nichols and other like-minded people in the area are working on keeping it that way. "We're lucky here," says Nichols, walking in the crisp morning air along Swanton Road with his black and white Newfoundland, Fisher. "This isn't about rebuilding something, it's about hanging onto it."