UCLA’s administration revealed grandiose plans last year in light of enrollment increases: It would add three new residence halls and two new apartment complexes in Westwood by 2021. UCLA proposed a dorm building on the intersection of Le Conte, Gayley and Levering avenues that was supposed to be an ambitious 20 stories.

Then the Westwood Neighborhood Council got involved. Members of the council expressed vehement opposition to a 20-story building in their beloved Westwood Village – their deserved view of the Santa Monica Mountains and Westwood Regency theaters would be lost behind a towering residence hall.

The council passed a resolution in September 2017 calling on the university to reduce the building’s height to 10 stories. Residents even threatened to file a lawsuit under the California Environmental Quality Act if UCLA went through with the proposal.

Several months later, UCLA administrators gave in to residents’ concerns, lopping off three stories and 200 beds from its proposed Le Conte Avenue dorm. The primary reason, as per Administrative Vice Chancellor Michael Beck, UCLA decided to reduce the size of the building: concerns the building was too tall in comparison to other buildings in Westwood.

A three floor decrease may not seem significant, but it does reduce available housing for students. Downsizing the Le Conte Avenue dorm as UCLA increases enrollment means hundreds of students would likely have to seek out housing far from campus.

UCLA should not give in to Westwood residents’ frivolous concerns about building height or aesthetic. The university needs to build its Le Conte Avenue dorm according to its original design of 20 floors. Residents’ concerns about aesthetic are absurd in comparison to the demand for housing. Blocking a portion of the Santa Monica Mountains or having another tall building in the skyline is irrelevant when 200 Bruins won’t have housing. Westwood residents must recognize they share the neighborhood with students.

Beck said UCLA decided to reduce the size of the building because the university wanted the dorm to be closer in height to other high-rise buildings in Westwood.

But a 17-floor building still classifies as a high-rise, which means it must still undergo the same approval process as a 20-story building, said Michael Skiles, Graduate Students Association president. Since UCLA already plans to build a high-rise, it only costs marginally more to build the full 20 stories compared to just 17, Skiles said.

Additionally, developing dorm plans takes several years – the current plan took five years – so UCLA won’t be able to compensate for the lost beds or develop new dorms plans anytime soon, said Chloe Pan, Undergraduate Students Association Council external vice president.

Beck estimated 141 of the 200 additional beds afforded by the 20-story design would have been occupied by students, and added UCLA has not compensated for the lost beds in other other proposed dorms because of site constraints.

Losing beds also raises demand for triple-occupancy rooms, which this project aimed to reduce in the first place, Beck said. He added the project was also meant to give upperclassmen more university housing options. Now, more and more upperclassmen will have to search for limited off-campus, private housing and face staggering rents of about $4,200 per month for a two-bedroom apartment that are only bound to increase.

Another concern Beck cited was the height of the building didn’t match the height of other buildings in Westwood. But as Skiles pointed out, an office building connected to Napa Valley Grille, which sits at Glendon and Tiverton avenues, is 19 stories tall. There’s no need for UCLA to bend to some residents’ petty concerns and reduce the height of its Le Conte Avenue dorm from 20 stories when there is a precedent for high-rises in the Village.

UCLA’s responsibility is first to students and their housing needs, not to residents’ concerns about the Village’s aesthetic. Housing has far-reaching benefits beyond just giving students a roof over their heads; it’s also good for the economy in Westwood.

Andrew Thomas, executive director of the Westwood Village Improvement Association, said he thinks more student housing in the Village would improve the economy and vibrancy of the community. With residents closer to the hub of Westwood, businesses in the Village would have more customers, as seen in surrounding cities, he added.

“Santa Monica has really blown up in last 10 years because there’s a lot more housing,” Thomas said. “I don’t see how the same thing couldn’t happen in Westwood – the more housing in the district, the better for business and the community.”

Of course, there are concerns that traffic would increase in the Village because the Le Conte Avenue dorm would lack parking. These concerns are nonsensical, though. The dorm would be so close to campus and Westwood that students living there would not need cars – something Skiles and Angus Beverly, student director to WWNC, both pointed out. In fact, it’s worse for traffic in Westwood if students have to commute from outside cities because they can’t secure housing near UCLA.

Decreasing the size of the dorm from 20 to 17 floors won’t do much to improve the aesthetic for Westwood’s residents. But it will mean at least 141 students won’t have university housing.

UCLA needs to keep in mind its job is to meet the needs of students, not to give into petty battles about views in the Village.

Published by Emily Merz

Merz is a staff columnist for the Opinion section.

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11 Comments

  1. I completely disagree. 3 floors isn’t just aesthetics, it’s a hit to market value. While the homes/buildings in the area will likely not see a big change in value, the residents of Westwood should defend themselves against such changes. 141 UCLA students won’t enhance Westwood economy that much. If anything it makes the apartments area that much louder, dirtier, crowded and used (like wear and tear). Once I graduated, I realized how horrible UCLA students are to their non-student neighbors. Trying to go to bed early to wake up for a job at 8 or 9, dealing with illegal parking, and the traffic trying to just get home. For people who bought property in Westwood, I get their oppositions. C/o 2008

    1. The homes nearby are worth millions. If they lost value that would be great actually because rich people deserve to lose money. 141 UCLA students wouldn’t enhance the economy much but you know what would? If the Westwood residents that ran the neighborhood council weren’t such puritans about alcohol licenses so that bars could open up in the village. UCLA was there before all the residents currently living in Westwood so therefore it’s the residents that are actually horrible to the students.

  2. For the record, Westwood Neighborhood Council requested that UCLA add the extra height to other proposed dorm projects elsewhere on campus. WWNC recognizes the need for additional student housing. The opportunity exists to raise the height on other buildings which will NOT destroy the character of our Village.

  3. “UCLA should not give in to Westwood residents’ frivolous concerns about building height or aesthetic.”
    Can you really blame property owners who don’t want to have to stare at an eyesore right in front of their homes? Residents’ concerns about aesthetics really aren’t frivolous. Students are in Westwood for a few years, residents live there for lifetimes. This oversized building can sink Westwood property values.

    “Westwood residents must recognize they share the neighborhood with students.”
    UCLA students must recognize that they share the neighborhood with permanent residents!

    1. their concerns are frivolous. And it would be great if they sunk property values. The property values are too high. Also pretty sure UCLA was here before all the residents. They knew a college was near by when they moved in. Being a permanent resident also doesn’t make you more important.

      1. Being a permanent resident may not make you more important of a human being, but it does damn well make you someone with a greater stake in Westwood as a whole. As I said above, students are only here temporarily. Your blatant disregard for permanent residents in your crusade to ruin Westwood is utterly abhorrent.

        1. Saying they have a greater stake kind of feels like the same thing as saying they’re more important.

          1. You are clearly misinterpreting what I said. Having a greater stake means nothing more than having a greater stake. It is undeniable that permanent residents have a greater stake in Westwood compared to temporary students, and students need to recognize and acknowledge that instead of just complaining when they don’t get what they want (at the expense of the residents).

  4. Poor little snowflakes…you think your rights supersede those of taxpayers and property owners, many who have been living in Westwood much longer than you’ve been alive, and will be there long after you’ve left? What a vacuous, self-centered and myopic statement. Good luck in the real world, with the lack of higher-level thought process you display, you’ll need it.

    1. Nearby property owners don’t have a right to stop development on land that they don’t own and the amount of time they’ve lived in Westwood and will continue to live in Westwood doesn’t make their opinion more important. Your statement is the one that is truly “vacuous, self-centered and myopic” and you’re who is really displaying a “lack of higher-level thought process”

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