Landowner Pitches 30-Story
Towers for Beach
Galveston County
Daily News, January 23, 2008
by Leigh Jones
GALVESTON
— Beachfront landowner Cory Miner has
big dreams for Stewart Beach.
This
week, Miner unveiled plans for four 30-story
buildings at the end of a boardwalk the Galveston
Park Board of Trustees wants to build at the
city-owned park.
Miner
claims the towers are necessary to entice developers
to fund the boardwalk, a public-private partnership
the park board covets.
But
with mounting opposition to buildings even half
that height, Miner’s dream will likely
be a tough sell.
Miner,
who owns a tract at the end of Avenue L south
of Seawall Boulevard, began working on plans
for what he calls the Stewart Beach Redevelopment
District 18 months ago.
The
district stretches from Fourth to 10th streets
south of the seawall and includes the city’s
Stewart Beach Park and private property owned
by Miner and two others — about 60 acres.
The
park board revealed its plans to redevelop the
Stewart Beach area in October. With city council’s
blessing, the group hopes to build a new visitor’s
center at the park’s entrance by 2010.
Miner
told a meeting of the University Area Association
on Monday he could have the entire project,
which includes a new park pavilion, retail and
restaurant buildings and the hotel and condominium
towers built within seven years.
There’s
just one catch.
“This
has to be a collaborative effort between the
city, its citizens and the private sector,”
he said. “If not, this project will fail.”
Park
board members listened politely to Miner’s
presentation on Tuesday, but they didn’t
ask him any questions.
Area
residents were more inquisitive — and
not necessarily in an encouraging way.
Ralph
McMorris, who has opposed several recent high-rise
projects on the island, asked Miner if he would
be willing to sell the property so someone could
turn it into a park. Other residents asked why
he couldn’t build on the other side of
Stewart Beach. They also wanted to know where
the people who would work in the proposed hotel
would live.
Miner
said his plans are not set in stone and he wants
people to give him feedback, realizing it could
change the project. But he’s adamant he
won’t compromise on the height.
“Without
the high-rises, this project will never get
off the ground,” he said.
Miner
commissioned an economic feasibility study to
compare his project with the recently approved
Marquette Land Investments West End residential
development.
While
The Preserve at West Beach will create one job
per acre during the next 15 years, Miner said
his project would create nine jobs. He also
said his proposed hotels could bring the city
as much as $5.3 million in room tax during the
next 15 years.
Miner’s
study shows the Stewart Beach district would
boost the city’s economy by $388 million
during the same period.
And
he said he doesn’t need any incentives
from local government to make it happen. He
even plans to pay for extra police protection
with an additional layer of property tax on
the new buildings.
Miner
said he has no intention of taking his plan
through the city’s development process
until after the city council has adopted new
regulations governing height and density in
April.
The
property’s current zoning limits him to
a three-story building.
But
Miner, who purchased his property in 1992, said
he’s confident his plan would be best
for the whole East End, which he describes as
a serious financial disaster.
“Maybe
shorter is better, but the reality is that it’s
not economically viable,” he said.