Mike,,,do try to meet Antonio. He is a nice guy.
The development is reportedly to have about 600 hotel rooms...not the 2000 or 3000 noted elsewhere. In addition, they may not develop a new runway which makes sense to me.
However, you have to wonder if people would buy homes there if the ocean is questionable for swimming.
The original project, under the previous mayor, was 3000 rooms and backed by Donald Trump.
The new mayor revived it a few months ago, except he is not going public with this as the original project was so unpopular on the island. He has however, last August, showed plans to a select group of locals, who reported that he didn't mention Trump but a very wealthy Mexican family who supposedly now owns the land (newspaper do however report that Trump's son stayed at the mayor's house a few months back), and that he showed a first stage of the project with "only" 600 rooms, but that it seems they were planning on a second stage that would make it the size of the original project (which is why I wrote "planned to become a luxury town of 3000 rooms").
Even if they stop building after stage 1 (600 rooms), much destruction will already have occurred. They'll have to build a road, cut thru the forest (lots of birds, butterflies, insects
) to build the resort, probably have to spray tons of chemicals (don't think the potential visitors would appreciate being eaten alive by the resident mosquitos), manage waste disposal, damage the sea bottom to build piers and the marina
Regarding swimming, I've only visited that area during a Norte, so no wave or current that day, but for all I know that specific spot might be sheltered as it is shallow and surrounded by (beautiful and virgin) coral formations that extend to the surface. If these fan covered formations are not damaged by the construction of the resort and the pollution coming from waste waters, chemicals used for gardening and so on, they'll probably suffer from some idiot trying to jet ski around them or from cattle boats of snorkelers.
I also wonder about the sustainability of the project. I'm sure there is a market for upscale, secluded, beach front properties and I know people who actually prefer swimming in the pool (sigh). But no matter how pretty and picture perfect it might look when first built, how will it age ? Maintaining luxury in a tropical environment is extremely demanding and costly.
I'm afraid this project will destroy that area of the island and then look like a piece of crap nobody will want after a few years because they can't keep up with the maintenance or it has been half destroyed by a hurricane.
Meanwhile, more people will have flocked to the island to work at these properties (to build them, maintain them and then maids, waiters, gardeners
), which will strain the local real estate market (unless they plan on building rooms for the staff, haven't read anything about that). And if it fails after a few years, it will leave even more lowly qualified people on the island without a job than there are today.
In all honesty, as much as I love the East coast, I probably wouldn't have signed the petition if they had been planning on building something that I really thought had potential to bring long term employment. But this IMO is an environmental and social disaster waiting to happen.