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Coastal Commission OKs Pepperdine's Campus Improvement Project

The 400,000 square-foot project is approved on the condition that the university draft a traffic management plan to prevent excessive congestion on Pacific Coast Highway during peak times.

The California Coastal Commission unanimously approved Pepperdine University's 400,000-square-foot on-campus development project Thursday.

Commissioners gave the green light to the university's request to amend its Long Range Development Plan during its meeting at the Sheraton Fisherman's Wharf in San Francisco.

The project is seeking to overhaul student housing, relocate and create a new athletics and events center with 5,470 seats, provide an upgraded NCAA soccer field, develop a town square and welcome center, an enhanced recreation center area and a parking structure at the School of Law.

"This project creates more green space and parking on campus. It moves campus events deeper into the campus and away from our neighbors. It improves outdoor campus lighting," Pepperdine President Andrew Benton said.

One of the conditions of approval is that the university develop a standardized lighting plan and a transportatioin management plan to ensure that events at the new athletic center do not jam Pacific Coast Highway.

Once completed, the transportation management program will be reviewed by the Coastal Commission and Los Angeles County's Advisory Transportation Committee.

A Pepperdine attorney told commissioners the university has no objections to the commission's conditions of approval.

During an hour-low public hearing, no speakers opposed the project. However, the City of Malibu sent a letter to the Coastal Commission, outlining concerns about the impacts to traffic from the events center. The university is located outside Malibu's city limits and is not within the jurisdiciton of the Malibu City Council.

Don Schmitz, speaking as president of the Malibu Chamber of Commerce, asked the commission to support the project.

"We think it’s a beautiful project and we urge your approval," Schmitz said.

Julie Rousseau, Pepperdine's head basketball coach, said the improved athletic facilities are needed to help with recruiting.

"We are losing some of those battles with recruiting," Rousseau said.

Michael Corrigan, who lives at the neighboring Malibu Country Estates, said that Pepperdine is part of the fabric of Malibu.

"Pepperdine does compete for students all around the world. We’re entering an era where student populations are about to decline," Corrigan said.

Greg Lee, a Pepperdine University alumni and TV reporter in the Palm Springs area, also supported the project, explaining that the school has an impact on the students that attend there.

"This university changes lives. It changed mine," Lee said.

Andy Lyon December 13, 2012 at 04:07 pm
The cancer is allowed to continue to grow out of control.
Hans Laetz December 13, 2012 at 04:48 pm
When this came before the city council, some of us asked that Pepperdine be requested (not required) to contribute to the PCH congestion and safety studies now under way, to speed them up. Every other smart city in California would say "if you want us to bless your project, pay for some improvements." Our city council did not do that.
Instead, Coastal has asked Pepperdine is going to do a piecemeal congestion plan only for its contribution to PCH traffic, and only for special events. As I read this, the COUNTY will approve it, not the city. Malibu, once again, has shied away from its role on PCH. Caltrans, Pepperdine and the county will be studying the impact of the Pepperdine expansion on Malibu's main street. It appears the Malibu Chamber of Commerce made a bigger impact than did the City of Malibu. Again.
Susan Tellem December 14, 2012 at 12:15 am
No surprise - we are sitting ducks for all developers now. There is no way to mitigate traffic and so this is all a waste of time. If there's a fire, which there has been a number of times on the Pepperdine campus, or close to it, try getting all those sports fans out of their sets into their cars and out on the highway - then what. Gridlock. Remember the burning car on PCH during the 2009 fire? I think it was a Mercedes? Picture 200 burning cars. Or 400. Or more. Coastal hates us so what do they care?
Ellen Francisco December 14, 2012 at 01:05 pm
I still wonder how Pepperdine University was able to keep from being a part of the City of Malibu? They are an island unto themselves only under County and Coastal Jurisdiction. They benefit from being here, but do they participate financially in any way (other than what the students and faculty spend at markets, restaurants, stores etc.)? Just curious how others feel about this?
Andy Lyon December 14, 2012 at 02:27 pm
The City of Pepperdine.
Terry December 14, 2012 at 03:44 pm
our sity counsel is so so disappointing. goodbye to malibu. now we can have lights at peperdine also. its the new combo of westwood and beverly hills. happy now laura.

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Max June 18, 2013 at 09:02 am
Firemen are my true heroes. Not once, but twice, have they saved my house over the years, as wellRead More as where I worked most of my career. We cannot thank them enough for their yeomen efforts and hard work. When they are on the lines, we always provide them with food and drink, which is the least that we can do. We also welcome them when they make their annual inspections of properties here to ensure that homeowners clear their brush. When I was in school, we were visited by Firemen, who handed out badges and booklets on fire safety. I was proud to wear my "Junior Fireman" badge back then, and feel the same today!
Don Schmitz June 19, 2013 at 02:51 pm
We truly are blessed with the best first responders a community could hope for. A nod also to theRead More excellent building and planning standards we have implimented over the last few decades. Homes are now required to have dual pane glass, stucco (or commensurate) siding, class A roofs, adequate access, significant water storage, and the essential 200 ft. brush clearance. The proof has been demonstrated, and the results are impressive.
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Yvonne Carrison June 17, 2013 at 09:24 am
Luv the rainbow over our heavenly canyon, we are truly blessed to live here! Gratitude
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Snookie Ravioli June 17, 2013 at 08:44 am
A follow-up to Tom Brady's idea of annelected mayor. That woukd require a change in the form ofRead More government in Malibu to a Mayor-Manager form. The Mayor-Manager form is best for larger cities. Most cities the size of Malibu have the Council-Manager form because experience shows it works best for small cities. Having an elected mayor with the power of an elected mayor could create more problems than it solves. It would completely change the political environent in Malibu, and not for the better. Having weak, rotating mayors serves Malibu well.
Dee Rivellino June 17, 2013 at 06:07 pm
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Max June 12, 2013 at 01:46 am
Dear Burt, A very toughing piece about your dear father. If only more fathers these days had theRead More values and character that your father had, this world would be a much better, more caring and loving place. I, too, had a father that was very giving and supportive of me. As both of my parents were holocaust survivors, my upbringing was greatly influenced by their horrific experiences in Poland, Czechoslovakia and Germany: losing 80% of our families, being in over a dozen different concentration camps and facing death and torture continuously. It’s amazing that they were able to lead “normal” lives upon immigrating to the US. Never finishing high school in Poland and not speaking a word of English, he attended night school (Fairfax High), worked during the days in the subcontractor business (he manufactured venetian blinds, screens and louver windows, all from scratch, decades before they were imported), became a citizen (as did my late Mom) and raised a family. They eked out a living (lower middle class), sent my younger brother and I to Hebrew school every day after public school classes, encouraged us to strive in school and somehow supported my hobby of being a radio amateur and my brother in violin studies. My parents always wanted me to become an electronics engineer (probably based on the dream my father had before WW2). Several of his proudest moments were when I got accepted into the physics grad schools of Princeton, Harvard, Caltech, Stanford and UCLA; when I received my PhD from Caltech; when I authored a cover feature article in Scientific American; and when I married my Beshert (soul mate). As a kid, I had a mild connection to you, Burt. I loved rulers, be they the fancy compact metallic ones that retracted by the push of a button, the ones that had a mechanical crank to reel in the ruler or the foldable wooden rulers (that I always associated with a magic trick), which I would use in school, the lab and measuring Ham radio antennas that I built as a kid. All this was influenced by my dear father, equipped with rulers of all kinds, which he used on a daily basis when precisely measuring windows and door frames, manufacturing venetian blinds, screen doors, etc. As a 5-year old, my father would take me to his 2-man shop and, as they worked, I would run around the place with various rulers and magnets in tow, measuring everything in sight and picking up nails and hardware. I guess the only difference between us is that you became a ruler and I became one who is ruled. Happy Father’s Day, Burt!
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Thanks. Moon rise.
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Well done Jim! You are putting Malibu on the map for world class wine. Congratulations! kim &Read More larry
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