Proposal to Rescind WeHo’s Approval of the Arts Club on Sunset Will Be on March 2019 Ballot

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Illustration of the Sunset Strip facade of the Arts Club during daylight hourse (Gensler architects)

Unite Here Local 11, a union representing hotel and restaurant workers, has obtained enough signatures to put on the March 5, 2019, ballot a measure that would require the West Hollywood City Council to rescind its approval of the Arts Club project on Sunset Boulevard.

The City Council on Sept. 4 gave final approval of a plan to build a local outpost of the London-based Arts Club, a project that is being backed by Gwyneth Paltrow. The council’s approval was necessary because the proposed building will be substantially higher and more dense that what is permitted under the city’s zoning ordinance and the Sunset Specific Plan.

“We feel like this is a historic in a lot of ways,” said Danielle Wilson of United Here. “In less than 30 days there was a coalition of over 60 people including residents and hotel workers and students who knocked on over 10,000 doors throughout the city.”

“The residents and voters of West Hollywood have spoken and sent a powerful message to the city’s leadership asking them to say ‘no’ to this luxury development project.”

The Arts Club will be housed in a 120,000-square-foot building on the lot where the Hustler sex accessories store now sites. It will include a restaurant, a lounge, a supper club, guest rooms for club members and a rooftop pool area as well as retail space and a public art gallery and performance rehearsal space. Ten of the guest rooms will be rented out as hotel rooms. The building is designed by architect Andy Cohen of Gensler.

The Arts Club has agreed to provide $13.5 million in benefits to the city. That includes the art gallery and rehearsal space and a staff to maintain it, which it values at $10.1 million, a contribution to city arts programs of $1.25 million over 10 years and an additional $1 million contribution to the city. The development will be located on the southeast corner of Sunset Boulevard and Hilldale Avenue, which now is occupied by a building that houses the Hustler porn and sex toy store.

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As of publication, Unite Here has not responded to a request from WEHOville for comment on its petition.  In similar campaigns, including an unsuccessful one to block the Robertson Lane project, the union has said it is fighting to ensure that hotel and restaurant workers are paid fair wages and given appropriate benefits and protection. On Nov. 19 the West Hollywood City Council will have the matter on its agenda and may vote to rescind approval of the Arts Club or to proceed with letting it go on the March 2019 ballot, which is the expected result.

“We are very, very confident that the council will stand by their decision to approve the project,” said   Steve Afriat, the lobbyist representing the Arts Club. “And we are very confident we will prevail in the election.”

Afriat said he believed that random people approached by United Here signature gathers may not have understood what they were signing, but that would be clear when the item goes on the ballot.

The City Council approved the project in a four-to-one vote, with Councilmember John Heilman opposing it. Heilman said the Arts Club would be a “wonderful addition to West Hollywood and the Sunset Strip,” but he said the proposal would be “an outright repudiation of the Sunset Specific Plan” which limits the density of a project to a floor-area ratio of 1.5 and a height of 40 feet. The project as proposed has a floor-area ratio of 5.89 and 141 feet in height.

An option proposed by Heilman at a City Council meeting in August was to eliminate the 45,000 of office space proposed for the building, which he argued was included only to generate a profit for the developer and not to support the Arts Club. Heilman also said the Arts Club, which would be open only to its members, is adding to the “privatization” of the Sunset Strip. He cited the private SoHo House club and 1OAK, an exclusive night club, as other examples. Membership in the London Arts Club costs the equivalent of $2,547 in British pounds.

Heilman said he also was concerned that, if the Arts Club should leave the property, the new occupant of the property would not be required to fulfill requirements that the Arts Club had agreed to.

The Arts Club has agreed to provide $13.5 million in benefits to the city. That includes the art gallery and rehearsal space and a staff to maintain it, which it values at $10.1 million, a contribution to city arts programs of $1.25 million over 10 years and an additional $1 million contribution to the city.

Unite Here was required to obtain signatures of 10% of West Hollywood’s registered voters to put the proposal to rescind approval of the Arts Club on the ballot, which will include candidates for three City Council seats up for re-election and a proposal for a 7.5% local tax on recreational cannabis sales.

A group called the Committee to Preserve the Sunset Strip was formed to campaign against the Unite Here effort. As part of that campaign, registered voters received robocalls with the recorded voice of City Councilmember John D’Amico urging them not to sign the Unite Here petition. Genevieve Morrill, CEO of the West Hollywood Chamber of Commerce, sent an email message to chamber members and supporters making the same request.

In an earlier story about the petition effort, D’Amico explained his support for the project. “I am very excited about this use on our famous boulevard,” he said. “It feels like a new beginning for entertainment on Sunset. And in a new world class building by a world class architect. And I am very excited about a portion of the public benefit, the 25-year commitment to the arts … and yearly funds to the arts commission grants budget.

“That’s why I agreed to speak up on behalf of the project, because it does deliver on all the things that WeHo promises – to be a place that takes care of residents, workers and visitors. And invents the culture other cities consume.”

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Shawn m Thompson
6 years ago

Democracy get’s a chance in #weho! Why not let residents vote on such massive density! On The Robertson Lane Project the developer paid the petition away ….Even more money – $150,515 – was spent by the “Save the Factory” committee established by Faring Property Group, the developer of Robertson Lane, to counter the union’s effort.Faring’s largest single expenditure was $49,529 to General Strategies of Burbank for canvassers who stood on city sidewalks asking residents to sign a “Save the Factory” petition and to agree to rescind their signature on the Unite Here petition if they had signed it earlier. Its… Read more »

Shawn m Thompson
6 years ago

Democracy gets a chance! Why not let the residents vote on a project of such massive density! Lets remember in the Robertson Lane Project the Developer Spent Even more money – $150,515 – was spent by the “Save the Factory” committee established by Faring Property Group, the developer of Robertson Lane, to counter the union’s effort.Faring’s largest single expenditure was $49,529 to General Strategies of Burbank for canvassers who stood on city sidewalks asking residents to sign a “Save the Factory” petition and to agree to rescind their signature on the Unite Here petition if they had signed it earlier.… Read more »

Cautious
Cautious
6 years ago

Didn’t see you there during the public process. This was an “artfully” conceived project that seemingly made its way through the channels. Why was John Heilman the only one to pick up on the overreach? Dont ook a gift horse in the mouth for this well timed snag. If it was properly vetted it will proceed if not it will need adjustment.

John
John
6 years ago

Well said Shawn! Couldn’t agree with you more.

Sensitive Development
6 years ago

While not sympathetic to Unite Here in its campaign against Robertson Lane, perhaps their time has come to allow us to reevaluate The Arts Club. John Heilman clearly saw the problematic overreach of WeHo’s land use regulations. Members of the Planning Commission and other Council Members appeared lost perspective in the details amongst exaggerated public benefits, celebrity connections and questionable architectural value.

Thanks for the possible redo.

LADOUG
LADOUG
6 years ago

I agree with JJ.

Can anyone provide a copy of the information Unite Here circulated or used to obtain the alleged signatures? Were residences deceived into signing?

Rob Bergstein
Rob Bergstein
6 years ago

There was no “coalition of 60 people” working on this, there were paid signature gatherers who had no knowledge of what they were asking people to sign & totally misrepresented themselves. They came to our house & I asked what it was & he said there were West Hollywood residents asking for this. I asked if he was a resident,. “No” How many Planning Commission meetings did you attend. “None”. How many City Council meetings did you attend “None” Are you being paid per signature. “Yes”. So it’s not ‘ a group of West Hollywood residents, it’s a union that… Read more »

kab1200
kab1200
6 years ago

Unite Here is a very underhanded group. I asked them to leave my condo building, and they fought me, every time. Whether the project is liked or not, this union is evil.

Mischa
Mischa
6 years ago

Totally agree!

John
John
6 years ago

Once ALL of West Hollywood residents find out how ENORMOUS this project is, they will vote it down. There’s too much traffic in the city already!

David Abrams
David Abrams
6 years ago
Reply to  John

This project is appropriately sized for its location on Sunset Blvd. Look at how tall other buildings on Sunset are.

John
John
6 years ago
Reply to  John

I completely disagree. The residents had already agreed to the Sunset Specific Plan. Why give them so much more FAR? Why allow for so much height? Most importantly, why change part of the land that’s zoned for housing to commercial? This project has too many flaws.

Eric Jon Schmidt
Eric Jon Schmidt
6 years ago

Democracy in action…something we have never seen in West Hollywood. Hopefully, it’s a start of something new. Old school politics by elected officials who bend the rules based upon campaign contributions are not effective. People are sick of it. Time to throw the bums out!

WeHoMikey
WeHoMikey
6 years ago

…from a guy who’s campaigning to be one of “the bums”…

John
John
6 years ago

This building is a monstrosity! Too big! Too tall! There is already too much traffic in the city. I’m sure this will get a resounding NO.

Mark T
Mark T
6 years ago

This is the same scenario as the Robertson Lane project.
The site won’t unionize, so the union threatens a petition to shut them down as retaliation.
I’m generally pro-union, but these sleazy tactics are tarnishing their usefulness and reputation. Clear extortion.

John
John
6 years ago
Reply to  Mark T

The only that is tarnished is the politicians that voted for this HUGE project. Finally the residents are getting their say-through direct democracy!

Randy
Randy
6 years ago
Reply to  John

So then, where do we draw the line? Does every project go on the ballot? You might not like them, but we have a Planning Commission and City Council for many reasons. If every large development had to be on the ballot, nothing would happen, which I’m sure would please many NIMBY residents.

John
John
6 years ago
Reply to  Randy

Randy,

The only reason this can be sent to the ballot is because the council made changes to existing law. If they would’ve stayed within the confines of the Sunset Specific Plan there would be no referendum. I think the residents need to have a choice when parts of the land that are zoned for housing get changed to commercial.

Let the residents decide. Do they want more housing or more commercial space.

John
John
6 years ago
Reply to  Mark T

Wake up and smell democracy at work. If the council would’ve stayed within the limits of the Sunset Specific Plan this wouldn’t have happened. Next time, the shouldnt change the zoning from housing to commercial, allow for more FAR and for more height.

John
John
6 years ago
Reply to  John

Lol. Someone is sure mad about the rights the citizens of West Hollywood have. I’m really happy all the voters will have a say about why the zoning was changed from housing to commercial to approve this project. With such a housing shortage why are we getting rid of housing? Do you think that’s fair JJ?

Randy
Randy
6 years ago
Reply to  John

Jon, you are really happy, that residents are going to have a say, while they get influenced by flyers, commercials, possibly, and lobbying? That is a much different process than people being engaged, and attending public meetings. Do you really think that they are going to be given valid, impartial information, with it being on the ballot? I sincerely doubt that. JJ is correct, all of the information was out there, people could have been engaged, and could’ve spoke up if they didn’t like this project. This is just political muscle from the union. We didn’t get their way. They… Read more »

Steve Martin
Steve Martin
6 years ago

John Heilman’s comments were right on. This demonstrates that our land use regulations mean nothing when it comes to a deep pocketed developer who has retained a politically connected consultant. Basically the developer promised a rehearsal space for the Gay Men’s Chorus which immediately opened the door to getting around the already generous Sunset Specific Plan. Thanks to Unite Here we may be able to have a community discussion about how land use decisions are being made in our little city.

WeHoMikey
WeHoMikey
6 years ago
Reply to  Steve Martin

“the proposed building will be substantially higher and more dense that what is permitted under the city’s zoning ordinance and the Sunset Specific Plan” Former Councilmember Martin is correct. The Sunset Specific Plan is already much more generous than the city’s general zoning laws. Considering that there is NO buffer between Sunset (or any commercial district, actually) and the residents who want to sleep at night so they can work during the day, this is a project far too big and far too intrusive for anyplace other than the Vernons and the Cities of Industries. The developer’s promise of “rehearsal… Read more »

Concerned Citizen
Concerned Citizen
6 years ago
Reply to  Steve Martin

Which a certain “Mayor” also happens to be the chair of the board of. How convenient!