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Housing & Homelessness

Could 800 homes be headed for this coastal stretch of Huntington Beach?

A map that includes a coastal stretch of Huntingtoon Beach with a pink border outlining a slice of land along Pacific Coast Highway.
A stretch of seaside land on PCH, between Goldenwest Street and Seapoint Street, could become housing, but don't expect to be touring model homes any time soon.
(
California Resources Corporation
)

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Listen 0:44
Could 800 homes be headed for this coastal stretch of Huntington Beach?
An oil company that owns 92 acres of beachfront real estate in Huntington Beach is taking the first steps to redevelop it for housing and commercial uses.

Topline:

An oil company that owns 92 acres of beachfront real estate in Huntington Beach is taking the first steps to redevelop it for housing and commercial uses.

Wait, undeveloped land on the O.C. coast? Yep. The strip of land along Pacific Coast Highway between Goldenwest Street and Seapoint Street, just south of the Bolsa Chica wetlands, has been dedicated to oil and gas production for close to 100 years. Now, the company that owns the land wants to redevelop it.

Listen 0:44
Could 800 homes be headed for this coastal stretch of Huntington Beach?

The bigger picture: Huntington Beach, like many Southern California coastal cities, is under state pressure to help alleviate the housing crisis by zoning for more units. The conservative beach city is fighting those mandates in court. But last year, the previous City Council — in a rare unanimous vote — approved a plan to build 250 residential units plus a hotel and retail space on another piece of former oil land near the coast.

What’s the first step? The company, California Resources Corporation, has submitted an application to the city to have the land rezoned for residential as well as commercial uses. They say that would allow them to develop up to 800 homes on the property, plus up to 350 hotel rooms, and some 23 acres of parks and open space. To move forward, they’ll have to get approval from the city’s planning commission and then the City Council. They’ll also need the city to amend its Local Coastal Program, and they’ll need approval from the California Coastal Commission.

What’s the timeline? Don’t expect to see homes there anytime soon. A spokesperson for the landowner estimated the City Council could consider the proposed amendment in mid-2026. If they get approval from the council and the Coastal Commission, there are dozens of active oil wells and other oil production facilities on the land that would have to be phased out and cleaned up.

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