new hotel-conference center

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Listen to Regents Meeting of Sept. 11, 2012 in Two Parts

We have previously posted audio excerpts from the Sept. 11, 2012 session of the Regents dealing with the UCLA hotel and the UCLA teaching center.  The web source on which we park audio from the Regents is again operational so here is the full meeting, divided into two parts as per the agenda below. Tuesday, September 11, 2012 Meeting Agenda, University of California Regents Part 1 1:00 pm Committee on Compliance and Audit (Regents only session) 1:10 pm Committee of the Whole – Public Comment (open session) – includes public testimony on UCLA hotel project 1:30 pm Committee on Compliance…

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Listen to Hotel Echoes in Regents Reluctant Go-Ahead for UCLA Medical Facility

We noted yesterday that the website where we usually park audio for Regents meetings, archives.org, is having a tech heart attack.  Recovery is promised, maybe by the end of today.  In the meanwhile, we will continue to post excerpts. After the Regents Building and Grounds Committee rubber stamped the hotel (except for bathrooms and loading docks!), it went on to consider a proposal for a new Teaching and Learning Center for the Health Sciences.  The presentation was by Steve Olsen and Dean Eugene Washington of the Med School.  In this case, we came close to a repeat of the March…

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Listen to Regents Committee Approval of UCLA Hotel: 9-11-12

Normally, we would post the full audio of the Regents and then provide excerpts if helpful.  However, our audio posting site, archive.org, seems to be having technical problems.  So here (below) is just the audio component of today’s Regents session dealing with the proposed UCLA hotel/conference center.   If archive.org continues to have problems, we will find some other work-around. As was expected, the proposal was rubber stamped by the Building and Grounds Committee after a presentation by Steve Olsen and campus architect Jeffrey Averill.  There was testimony from the Save Westwood Village group during the public comment period raising 1)…

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More for the Regents to Consider Before They Rubber Stamp the UCLA Hotel

Yesterday we posted a note suggesting that big projects largely dependent on future revenue streams can lead to big losses.  For those Regents who need a reminder from past history, the two excerpts below might be instructive: UCLA Buys Land in Westchester for 90 Faculty Homes July 20, 1989 | SPENCER S. HSU | Los Angeles Times UCLA has bought a controversial, 57-acre site on the Westchester Bluffs for $15.25 million to build subsidized faculty housing. The 90-home development will be UCLA’s fourth and largest housing project. Since 1986, in an effort to help its faculty members cope with the…

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Maybe the Regents Need to Consult With This Former Regent

Former speaker of the state assembly (and thus former Regent) and former mayor of San Francisco Willie Brown writes a weekly column for the San Francisco Chronicle.  The column is never on a single issue but jumps around from topic to topic.  Today’s column has a paragraph related to a grand construction project at UC-Berkeley: Cal’s newly redone Memorial Stadium makes no sense to me. Why spend all those millions fixing up a stadium that is in one of the least-accessible spots in the Bay Area? Don’t get me wrong – the stadium is beautiful. But now, Cal is trying…

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Something for the Suggestion Box

The Chancellor’s email sent yesterday discussed various options for UCLA funding in view of the limited outlook for state support. One of them was philanthropy: Enhanced philanthropyUCLA raised $402 million in private support this past year, and we have averaged $420 million per year for the past five years. This record of success routinely places UCLA among the top 10 universities in fundraising—public or private. In fact, we are the number one fundraiser in the country among public universities. Our success says much about the passion of our donors, the vision and quality of our faculty and academic leaders, and…

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Impressive!! The UCLA Hotel-Brick-Grande Unveiled on Regents Agenda

As noted on yesterday’s blog, the Regents agenda was posted but without the detailed items.  Now we can see the images of the UCLA Hotel Grande and it turns out to be brick.  The prior conceptual images were not clear.  There is also a grand report to the Regents which surely they will read, page by page.  Those who testified at the June hearing will be happy to note that “no substantive comments were received in comment letters or the public hearing that required changes to the conclusions of the Draft EIR.”   The Regents item can be downloaded at:http://www.universityofcalifornia.edu/regents/regmeet/sept12/gb3.pdf or…

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The Regents Shouldn’t be Shocked If Tax Problems Arise from the UCLA Hotel

As our previous blog post noted, final approval of the UCLA Hotel Super-Grande is to be rubber stamped at the Regents Sept. 11.  The business plan was previously approved in July (after being deemed unacceptable in March) so this approval is just for the architecture.  At Regents meetings and numerous other venues, the Regents and UCLA have been given public notice of the tax problems potentially embedded in the hotel plan.  There was an editorial on the subject in the LA Business Journal previously.  And this week there is an op ed in the same newspaper.  You can read an…

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Waiting for Details on the September 11-13 Regents Meeting

The Regents are meeting Sept. 11-13 at UC-San Francisco.  Below is the preliminary agenda – which includes the architectural plans for UCLA’s Hotel Super-Grandeand an “Action Approval” for some plans related to Health Sciences at UCLA.  At the moment (7 am today), the detailed agenda items are not yet posted. Tuesday September 11 1:00 pm Committee on Compliance and Audit (Regents only session) 1:10 pm Committee of the Whole – Public Comment (open session) 1:30 pm Committee on Compliance and Audit (open session) 3:00 pm Committee on Grounds and Buildings (open session) including: GB3 Action Amendment of the Long Range…

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UCLA: How about Buying Palomar?

No, not the observatory.  The Palomar Hotel on Wilshire, a short distance from UCLA.  Back in March, the Regents asked why UCLA didn’t buy the W Hotel rather than build its own.  The W may not be for sale.  But the nearby Palomar Hotel is. See below.  And cheap, too.  Just a thought! UPDATE: We could have bought the W Hotel but it would have been twice as much, although considerably less than the planned UCLA hotel (which comes with free land, unlike the W).http://www.globest.com/news/12_423/losangeles/hotel/W-Los-Angeles-Hotel-Changes-Hands-for-125M-324549.html