WALNUT CREEK — Chick-fil-A wants to open an eatery at a Walnut Creek strip mall, but the controversial fast-food restaurant’s plans have already ruffled some neighbors’ feathers.
The chicken chain filed applications in May 2023 to build a 5,363-square-foot building at the Citrus Marketplace Shopping Center near Ygnacio Valley Road, replacing the vacant bank currently located at 2290 Oak Grove Rd.
No drive-thru window is proposed for the restaurant — opting to only offer dine-in and take-out services, such as app-based food delivery services — which would be open from 6 a.m. to 11 p.m. every day except Sunday.
The city’s Planning Commission on March 14 approved a conditional use permit for the infill project in a 6-1 vote, with Commissioner Melissa Ward dissenting.
Supporters of the plan included the owner of the European Delights Bakery next door, Rica Zaharia, who said she hopes the popular eatery would help attract more customers to support the businesses that are currently “dying everyday” in that plaza, which houses a daycare center, gyms, small eateries and other retailers.
But several residents of the Woodlands neighborhood pushed back on the proposal, concerned that a Chick-fil-A on that intersection could increase traffic in an already-congested corridor and attract people who loiter or commit other crimes.
Many also argued that other fried chicken establishments — including a different Chick-fil-A less than four miles away from the proposed site — already exist in the city. Others were wary that the Georgia-based chicken restaurant has become a flashpoint in recent years, driven by its leaders’ conservative Christian beliefs and history of financially supporting anti-LGBTQ groups.
“Anecdotally, no one in the Woodlands wants this here — everyone is upset about this,” said a resident named Brian Wayne, adding that a bookstore or even a slower, sit-down restaurant would be a better fit for the area. “(Chick-fil-A) doesn’t really make sense for any place other than downtown, and it’s just not in keeping with the character of Walnut Creek.”
Related Articles
The bagels that wowed The New York Times arrive in Berkeley
Opinion: California’s wage bump doesn’t spell doom for fast food
Bay Area restaurants: 11 fantastic eateries for incredible French fries
Quinn’s Lighthouse returns: Oakland’s 40-year institution is now Vietnamese
Confusion reigns: Which fast food workers will get paid more in California?
The city has already received an appeal on the planning commission’s decision, according to associate planner Simar Gill. She said staff are currently trying to finalize a date for the Walnut Creek City Council to hear arguments on the project.
Addressing comments about congestion, Brett Walinski, vice president and principal associate of Hexagon Transportation Consultants, which conducted a traffic impact analysis in January, said that the traffic impact analysis conducted in January showed there would be enough parking spaces to handle anticipated demand, and that the expected afternoon peak traffic traveling into the neighborhood from Chick-fil-A on Citrus Avenue is 14 trips, or one every four minutes.
Christine Chou, principal development lead for Chick-fil-A in Northern California, and Nathan Loveland, the project applicant and land development consultant, also attempted to assuage fears during the March 14 meeting.
If the specific conditional use permit hadn’t been required for the reserved take-out space, Loveland said the store could have already been up and operating. Instead, they’ve taken the time to conduct three separate community outreach meetings, and have promised to contribute $30,000 reserved for traffic improvements in the neighborhood.
“This would be a restaurant authorized by-right in this area,” Loveland said. “We just want to make sure that you know where our heart is, to get (our permits) and to properly serve the community.”