
Photo Courtesy: City of Eastvale, Public Review Draft
An idea of what an Eastvale town center might look like.
Staff Reports
Eastvale – Since its 2010 incorporation, Eastvale has grown up quite a bit, and with all the development there is not much open land left in its 13 or so square miles – save the Leal Property. The 160-acre parcel of prime real estate has an exciting future ahead.
The land is owned by dairyman, Brad Leal, who has been working with the City of Eastvale in developing a plan that brings symmetry to his ideas for the property and what is best for the City.
According to Leal at a previous meeting about the project, “This is a big project and it will develop slowly. I don’t want some guy to just come in and build a big building.”
Instead Leal hopes that the project will come in phases of construction and establish a real Downtown Eastvale feeling.
In 2013, the City Council for the City of Eastvale initiated a long-range planning process for the property located at the northwest corner of Hamner and Limonite avenues to create a mixed-use town center on the site.
According to the City of Eastvale’s “Leal Master Plan,” the City envisions the project establishing itself as the “town center,” contributing to a desired regional destination place. The site will be anchored by a lifestyle center and surrounded by a mixture of complementary office, civic, hotel, residential, recreation and entertainment uses. The goal for all aspects of the project will exhibit the hallmarks of thoughtful, high-quality design (Victoria Gardens in Rancho Cucamonga and The Shoppes at Chino Hills come to mind).
The benefits will not only help to make Eastvale a destination city, but will provide significant employment opportunities, encourage high quality retail and restaurant establishments to make Eastvale their home, and keep residents (and tax dollars) from leaving the City for prime shopping and dining options.
More information will become available as a timeline is put together for phasing of the diverse development aspects of the project, beginning with environmental impacts and infrastructure coordination.
