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  #421  
Old Posted Nov 24, 2010, 9:53 AM
edluva edluva is offline
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i've dreamt of an urban soccer stadium for the mls. having a true soccer stadium (and not some piece of shit bleachers on roids like home depot center) in the heart of la would be the best thing to happen to los angeles soccer since winning the mls cup. i know the mls can't afford urban stadiums but really, urban neighborhoods are what soccer has been about since the sport was conceived over a hundred years ago. the way baseball has traditionally been for the early us -intra-urban rivalries between blue and white collar neighborhoods etc etc.
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  #422  
Old Posted Nov 26, 2010, 4:13 AM
dragonsky dragonsky is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Los Angeles Downtown News

Chinatown Park Effort Gets Nearly $5 Million
Money Will Help Create Facility at Ord and Yale Streets
Published: Wednesday, November 24, 2010 4:33 PM PST

DOWNTOWN LOS ANGELES – The dream of building a new park in Chinatown came a step closer to reality today, with the announcement that the effort has secured $4.9 million in state funds.

State and local officials today announced that the money will go to build a new park at Ord and Yale streets. It is one of seven park projects in Los Angeles that will receive a total of $29.1 million. The money comes Proposition 84, a state bond act passed by California voters in 2006 that provides funding for new parks and other projects.

The Community Redevelopment Agency, which played a lead role in applying for the funds, said the money will be used to acquire the nearly .6-acre lot. Plans call for the Chinatown park to include a playground, a fitness area, a plaza and performing arts space, game tables and restrooms.

“The new parks will be located in some of our most severely under-invested and park-poor areas,” said CRA Chief Executive Officer Christine Essel in a statement.

Plans also call for a walkway to be built that would connect the Chinatown branch library and the residential hillside above, although money for that part of the project will be paid for with separate state funds.

There is no timeline available yet on when the project will be completed, but CRA officials said the state money must be used by 2017.

The California Department of Parks and Recreation awarded $184 million to a total of 62 park projects statewide. Los Angeles’ share was nearly 16% of the total funds awarded.
Read More: http://www.ladowntownnews.com/articl...e889616375.txt
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  #423  
Old Posted Nov 28, 2010, 5:29 PM
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BrandonJXN BrandonJXN is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by edluva View Post
i've dreamt of an urban soccer stadium for the mls. having a true soccer stadium (and not some piece of shit bleachers on roids like home depot center) in the heart of la would be the best thing to happen to los angeles soccer since winning the mls cup. i know the mls can't afford urban stadiums but really, urban neighborhoods are what soccer has been about since the sport was conceived over a hundred years ago. the way baseball has traditionally been for the early us -intra-urban rivalries between blue and white collar neighborhoods etc etc.
Houston, Portland, Vancouver, Seattle all have stadiums downtown. Well..in Houston's case, it will have one.
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  #424  
Old Posted Mar 19, 2011, 2:47 AM
dragonsky dragonsky is offline
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Originally Posted by Los Angeles Times

Angel City lands downtown
The craft brewery's owner, Michael Bowe, has plenty of plans for the enormous space at his new spot, starting with his grand opening this weekend.
By Jessica Gelt, Los Angeles Times
March 18, 2011

When Michael Bowe opens the front door of Angel City Brewing in downtown Los Angeles, he points to the logo on his black polo shirt.

"See this?" he says excitedly. The design is a simulacrum of the distinctive pointed top of L.A. City Hall. The real thing looms on the horizon just northwest of Angel City's brick entryway.

"I started in Culver City 14 years ago, then bought the brewery in Torrance, but I always knew I'd move to downtown L.A.," he says of the now-omniscient logo, which he created back when Angel City was just a little upstart craft brewery that could.

Now it is poised to open in its new location on Friday as a massive 27,000-square-foot project in the works, with the capacity to brew 1,500 barrels a year. Plans include a full-service restaurant, a VIP lounge with pool tables, a special-event room, two stages for live music, a tasting bar, a beer garden and a gift shop.

If Bowe — who began home brewing in the mid-1990s, winning the award for California home brewer of the year twice in a row — follows through with his game plan, L.A. will have a worthy new tourist destination. And one that locals can't help but embrace.

Bowe's timing could not be more perfect. Craft beer is a hot libation in L.A. these days, with a host of new bars and restaurants, including the soon-to-open Mohawk Bend in Echo Park, the Federal Bar in North Hollywood and Public School 612 in downtown L.A., specializing in small-batch varieties.

Adding to the excitement is the slew of craft beer crawls and festivals that have cropped up in the last two years.

"Like the logo, it was meant to be," says Bowe, whose strong jaw and lean physique make him look like he just stepped out of the pages of an L.L. Bean catalog. "I'm in the right brewery, in the right place, at the right time."

Then there's the beer itself. Strong, rich, nuanced and flavorful, it comes in thick brown bottles with clever labels often devoted to Bowe's jazz heroes (he is a jazz saxophonist and released an album of Cole Porter favorites seven years ago). Rahsaan Roland Kirk Stritch Stout and Lester Young Porkpie Hat dark lager round out a varied line that also includes Angel City Vitzen (hefeweizen) and Belgian Night Train.

In the last two years, Angel City has taken home seven gold medals and two silver at the L.A. international beer competition at the L.A. County Fair.

The German-built brewing system, including a brew house, fermenters and bright tanks, was transferred to the three-story 1913 John A. Roeblings building from their former home in the Bavarian fantasyland that is Alpine Village in Torrance. The facility, with its original tile work, molding and exposed brick, should be fully operational in a month, with the restaurant coming within the year. But for now, Bowe is just excited to welcome his neighbors to Friday's celebrations and Saturday's grand opening.

Lots of beer, live music, local art and food trucks will be on offer. And on Saturday, Bowe's brother Matthew will cook tri-tip and sausage for the crowd.

"L.A. may not have a pro football team," says Bowe. "But at least now we'll have a great microbrewery."
Read More: http://www.latimes.com/theguide/bars...,4801274.story

Angel City Brewery
216 S Alameda St, Los Angeles, CA 90013
http://www.angelcitybrewing.com/
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  #425  
Old Posted Mar 21, 2011, 10:49 PM
Suffice Suffice is offline
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fantastic news about the brewery. The Arts district/ Little Tokyo only has a little more conversions/development before starting to spill south into Skid Row. Hopefully in a few years one will be able to zigzag northeast from South Park into the Arts District without deadzones or shitty streetscapes
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  #426  
Old Posted Mar 30, 2011, 2:06 AM
dragonsky dragonsky is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Los Angeles Times



Council OKs elaborate digital light zone at Wilshire Grand
The reconstructed 45-story Wilshire Grand Hotel and 65-story office tower can have digital ads, scrolling text and non-commercial graphics that the developer says are 'the wave of the future' and a councilman calls 'art.'
By David Zahniser, Los Angeles Times
March 30, 2011

The Los Angeles City Council on Tuesday approved an elaborate package of new flashing signs, illuminated graphics and moving text for two planned downtown skyscrapers, ignoring critics who warned that such brightly lighted images would degrade the look of the city.

On a 12-0 vote, the council unanimously created a new one-block sign district for the planned 45-story reconstruction of the Wilshire Grand Hotel and accompanying 65-story office tower.

That district will allow various kinds of digital advertising on the first 10 floors of the two towers. The tops of the two skyscrapers will feature digital signs promoting the buildings' owner and major tenants. And on dozens of stories in between, LED lights would display noncommercial images such as flowers and vines that would fade in and out.

Councilman Ed Reyes praised the "architectural lighting" on the upper floors, saying it should not be confused with other brightly lighted billboards. "It is art. And I believe it adds more culture" to Los Angeles, he said.

Added Councilman Dennis Zine: "I am amazed at how anyone could be opposed to this."

The sign district is the first approved since the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeal upheld the city's ban on new billboards last year. That law allows sections of the city to be carved out as exceptions to the ban.

Councilman Bill Rosendahl initially cast an opposing vote, saying the city should have found a way to share in the financial proceeds of the new digital advertising. But he essentially rescinded it minutes later to speed the project's approval. The council had already agreed to give developer Korean Air and its subsidiary, Hanjin International Corp., a tax break of up to $79 million for the two towers over the next 25 years. On Tuesday, council members also agreed to sell the developers more than $25 million in "floor area rights," which will allow the proposed office tower to be taller than the zoning allows.

Union members who packed the council chamber praised the hotel proposal, saying it would create roughly 7,300 construction jobs at a time of high unemployment. "This project is going to bring a lot of hope to a lot of members in our community," said David Kersh, spokesman for the Carpenters Contractors Cooperation Committee, a construction trade group.

Opponents of the sign district said they did not oppose the hotel's redevelopment, but argued that new flashing signs would barrage the public and, in some cases, distract motorists. "Digital billboards do not solve the unemployment in the city. Digital billboards will not increase tourism in our city," said Marina del Rey resident Jan Book, who voiced exasperation with the digital signs near her home.

The Wilshire Grand sign district is so complicated that it is divided into four vertical levels and three geographic subsections. Some lighted signs will change every eight seconds, others every four minutes. Still others will feature scrolling text.

The hotel proposal was backed enthusiastically by Councilwoman Jan Perry, a 2013 mayoral candidate who pushed hard for approval of the signs and images sought by Korean Air and its partner, Thomas Properties Group.

Perry persuaded her colleagues to double the size of the scrolling news ribbons that would be displayed on the first three floors of the towers. She and her colleagues tripled the amount of signage allowed by the Planning Commission, from 7,100 square feet to 30,900 square feet, between the fourth and 10th floors.

Perry also won approval of the noncommercial architectural lighting on the upper floors that had been opposed by the Planning Commission. Without those lights, the hotel would quickly become "dated," said Jim Thomas, chief executive of Thomas Properties Group.

"The signs we are talking about are the wave of the future," he said. "There will be no major building built in the future that does not take advantage of this new technology."
Read More: http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la...0,780697.story

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Originally Posted by blogdowntown.com
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Originally Posted by Curbed LA
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  #427  
Old Posted Apr 14, 2011, 1:26 AM
dragonsky dragonsky is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Los Angeles Times



Los Angeles lands shuttle Endeavour
The retiring spacecraft will be housed in the California Science Center, NASA announces, with the other orbiters going to the Kennedy Space Center and the Smithsonian.
By Richard Simon and Rong-Gong Lin II, Los Angeles Times
April 13, 2011
Reporting from Washington and Los Angeles

The space shuttle Endeavour — assembled in Palmdale and celebrated as the "jewel of the fleet" — is coming home to Southern California for permanent display at the California Science Center, NASA announced Tuesday, ending a fierce museum competition for among the rarest of space artifacts.

"This is a dream come true," said Jeffrey N. Rudolph, president of the Los Angeles museum.

Endeavour has yet to retire, though. Its final flight, scheduled for April 29, will be commanded by Capt. Mark E. Kelly, husband of Gabrielle Giffords, the Arizona congresswoman severely injured in the Tucson shooting in January.

Museum officials said the orbiter, which has circled earth 4,429 times and traveled more than 103 million miles in 24 missions, could arrive in Los Angeles by the end of the year, although NASA said preparations for the trip could take more time.

Endeavour's return is significant because for three decades the region played a crucial role in the shuttles' development. The program pumped hundreds of millions of dollars into the economy and employed thousands of workers, a source of pride for Southern California's once-thriving aerospace industry.

And then there was the occasional sonic boom, reminding Southern Californians that they owned a piece of space exploration history, every time the shuttle landed at Edwards Air Force Base.

NASA Administrator Charles Bolden announced the final landing locations for the spacecraft, which he called "national treasures," at a Kennedy Space Center ceremony marking the 30th anniversary of the first shuttle launch. The last shuttle mission is scheduled for late June.

The shuttle Atlantis will go to Florida's Kennedy Space Center and Discovery to the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum. The test orbiter Enterprise, now on exhibit at the Smithsonian in northern Virginia, will go to New York's Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum.

Having won a shuttle will not only enhance the California Science Center's prestige but give the city an economic boost. "To have one of only four things that exist in the world makes it a prize, a very valuable prize," said Valerie Neal, curator at the Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum.

The science museum plans to make Endeavour a centerpiece of its upcoming $170-million third wing, which will be devoted to aeronautics and space exploration. A NASA official said it could take about a year to prepare the shuttle for transport, including ridding it of toxins. And it will probably take about five years for the science center to complete its permanent home for Endeavour.

In the meantime, Rudolph said, the museum intends to find a location to temporarily house the shuttle, and a makeshift exhibit could be opened to the public sooner.

Rudolph was already working on transportation logistics for the five-story-tall orbiter, which has a 78-foot-wingspan.

Endeavour will be flown into the area atop a Boeing 747. From the airport, possibly Los Angeles International Airport, it will probably be towed to a storage facility via wide surface streets, unobstructed by freeway overpasses or electrical wires, Rudolph said.

The center has maneuvered aircraft through city streets before, with the arrival of the 150-foot-long Douglas DC-8 now on display outside the Exposition Park museum.

Los Angeles was widely considered an underdog in the shuttle competition.

Robert Yowell, a former NASA flight controller who monitored online guessers of NASA's picks, said "not one thought L.A. was going to get one."

Other museums had high-profile efforts led by astronauts. Politicians joined in with heavy arm twisting.

In contrast, the California Science Center, a free museum run by the state and a nonprofit group, mounted a low-key campaign. An official emphasized its widespread appeal as a general science museum, its 1.4 million annual visitors and its plans to give the aerospace gallery a separate building. It is expected to host as many as 2 million visitors a year with the arrival of the shuttle.

"We did a good job in explaining how we would use it to educate and inspire, which is what NASA is wanting to do," Rudolph said.

The museum's win also comes with a heavy responsibility. It now must raise tens of millions of dollars to bring the shuttle to Los Angeles, and continue its effort to raise money for its aeronautic wing.

Rudolph said the center had a strong fundraising track record, collecting $130 million over six years to help fund the museum's new home, which opened in 1998, and $165 million over another six years to pay for its second Ecosystems building, which opened in 2010.

If the museum cannot show sufficient progress to NASA that it can pay the federal agency the $28.8 million to transport Endeavour to Los Angeles, "there is a risk that California will not have an orbiter."

Rudolph said he thought it wasn't appropriate to begin raising funds before the center knew for certain it would receive a shuttle.

The $1.8-billion Endeavour rolled off Rockwell International's production line in Palmdale in 1991. It replaced the Challenger, which exploded in 1986, killing all seven aboard. Endeavour is named after a ship used by 18th century British explorer James Cook.

The announcement was a blow to other regions that lobbied hard to receive a shuttle — perhaps none more than Texas, home of NASA mission control. Its rejection prompted calls for congressional investigations and charges that politics played a role in the decision, which NASA disputed.

NASA officials said they were making shuttle artifacts available to other museums.

"In the end, these choices provide the greatest number of people with the best opportunity to share in the history and accomplishments of NASA's remarkable space shuttle program," Bolden said. "These facilities we've chosen have a noteworthy legacy of preserving space artifacts and providing outstanding access to U.S. and international visitors."
Read More: http://www.latimes.com/news/nationwo...0,688834.story
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  #428  
Old Posted May 18, 2011, 3:27 AM
dragonsky dragonsky is offline
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Join the supporters of Farmers Field
http://www.farmersfield.com/

Quote:
Originally Posted by NFL.com

Magic calls on fans to sign petition for L.A. football stadium
NFL.com Wire Reports
Published: May 17, 2011 at 04:24 p.m.

Sports and entertainment company AEG is reaching for star power in its quest to bring a football team to downtown Los Angeles.

In an email sent to Staples Center ticket purchasers and supporters, former Laker legend Earvin "Magic" Johnson made a plea for fans to sign a petition in support of Farmers Field stadium, which would be constructed over half the existing Los Angeles Convention Center in a rapidly-rejuvenated part of downtown that includes LA Live, an AEG-owned entertainment complex with concert venues, restaurants, a bowling alley, movie theaters and the Staples Center, which has housed the Lakers, the Clippers and hockey's Kings since 1999.

"For sports fans, Farmers Field makes L.A. one of the top sports cities in the world, giving us the stadium we need not only to host a football team, but the Super Bowl, Olympics, NCAA Final Fours and other major events," the statement reads. "And for business folks like me, Farmers Field brings more than 18,000 permanent, good paying jobs to the city -- building our urban communities and bringing pride back to our neighborhoods.

"It's about time that we finally give our city a football team -- and bring "Showtime" back to Los Angeles, not just on the basketball court, but on the football field."

AEG often touts LA Live's role in helping rejuvenate downtown Los Angeles as a preview of the impact its stadium proposal could have when promoting its plan to city residents and officials.

The AEG stadium plan is one of two competing proposals that aim to bring football back to Los Angeles some 15 years after the Rams and Raiders left the nation's second-largest market within months of one another.

AEG has said it would pick up the entire $1 billion construction tab for its stadium. The venue would be constructed over half the existing convention center, which would be rebuilt to attract more conventions. The company's plan calls for the city to issue some $350 million in bonds to finance the demolition and relocation of the contention center hall displaced by the stadium.

AEG officials have said they would ask the city to let AEG use stadium ticket taxes and new venue-related revenue from city-owned parking lots to service the debt on the bonds but would make up an estimated $6-million-to-$8-million shortfall.

Warehouse magnate Ed Roski has permits in place to build a separate 75,000-seat stadium about 15 miles east of Los Angeles, in the city of Industry.

Both camps have said they hope to recruit a team -- and possibly two -- from among those that need a new stadium to maximize revenue but are unable to get one built in their current locations.

The San Diego Chargers, Oakland Raiders, Minnesota Vikings and Jacksonville Jaguars are among the teams often mentioned as possible candidates to play in the proposed venues.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Read More: http://www.nfl.com/news/story/09000d...otball-stadium
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  #429  
Old Posted Aug 6, 2011, 2:46 AM
dragonsky dragonsky is offline
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LA Light
by Colin Rich plus
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  #430  
Old Posted Oct 5, 2011, 2:01 AM
dragonsky dragonsky is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MSNBC



Shuttles trading spaces in Houston, NYC and LA
Two museums will display full-scale models, prototypes; LA gets real deal
By Robert Z. Pearlman
MSNBC
updated 50 minutes ago

Six months after leaning they were or were not going to be getting one of NASA's retired space shuttles for display, museums in Los Angeles, Houston and New York are moving forward, and around, with their plans to bring the winged spacecraft to their facilities.

The California Science Center in Los Angeles will be the first museum to take ownership of an orbiter, Endeavour, during a private title-transfer ceremony scheduled for next week.

The prototype shuttle Enterprise, which unlike Endeavour never flew in space, isn't scheduled for transfer — by title or transport — until next year but the plans to display it at the Intrepid Sea, Air and Space Museum in New York City are moving forward.

And while Space Center Houston, the official visitor center for Johnson Space Center, was not awarded an orbiter, it is still planning to display a full-scale shuttle and in doing so, make room for space shuttle Atlantis to move to the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex in Florida.

NASA announced its selection of museums for the retired shuttles in April 2011. Endeavour, Atlantis and their older sister ship Discovery, which the Smithsonian will exhibit in Virginia, have been undergoing preparations at Kennedy to make them safe for public display. Discovery is slated to be the first shuttle to be moved next April.

No shuttle, no problem
Houston was not among the four locations NASA chose for a space shuttle display but plans are getting underway there to exhibit a full-size walkthrough orbiter and to build a new 8,000 square foot facility to highlight the space shuttle program.

Explorer, a full-scale space shuttle replica that for years has been on display at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex, will be moved to Space Center Houston. The lot it leaves vacant in Florida will be filled by a new facility to display shuttle Atlantis.
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Unlike Atlantis and the other flown shuttles, Explorer will offer Space Center Houston guests the opportunity to go where the other orbiters' visitors cannot: inside. [ Vote Now: What's Your Favorite Space Shuttle? ]

"Of course, we are very disappointed we didn't get a real orbiter, but we're excited we're getting a shuttle mockup," Paul Spana, Space Center Houston's exhibits manager, told collectSPACE.

"With the other orbiters, you'll be able to go up to them and see them but you can't actually go on board, you can't actually go inside of it. So we see that as being a positive thing about receiving the Explorer; our guests will be able to access the mockup on two levels: one on the flight deck and then on the mid-level deck."

"Not only is [Explorer] full scale, so people can get close to it and get a sense of how big it is — because there aren't too many places you can experience that — but not only that, you'll be able to go on board the orbiter," Spana said.

How Explorer is moved to Houston — by barge or some other means — and when it arrives is still under review. Once at the Johnson Space Center visitor center though, it will be displayed outside.

A nearby extension to Space Center Houston meanwhile, will house one of only two crew compartment trainers that astronauts used to train. Originally, that full-scale mockup was promised to the National Air and Space Museum, but the Smithsonian recently released it to stay in Houston.

Space Center Houston is hoping to pair the mock shuttle crew cabin with a real walkway that shuttle crews used to enter the orbiter on the launch pad.

"The white room and gantry from [Launch] Pad 39B may be available and I'm hoping that we get that," Spana said. "One thought, and I haven't discussed this with anyone, it might be nice to see the crew compartment trainer in the vertical position and have the white room and the gantry attached to it."

"We've got a very good chance of getting that piece and if we do, it should be pretty soon," he said.
Read More: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44780263.../#.Tou50rKVpPN
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  #431  
Old Posted Oct 12, 2011, 2:04 AM
dragonsky dragonsky is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by MSNBC

NASA hands over keys to space shuttle Endeavour
Spacecraft will be sent to California Science Center once it is made museum-ready
By Tariq Malik Managing editor
MSNBC
updated 10/11/2011 5:21:23 PM ET

NASA officially signed over the ownership of Endeavour, its youngest space shuttle, to the California Science Center in Los Angeles Tuesday, setting the stage for the retired spaceship's delivery to the museum next year.

Space agency officials handed over Endeavour's title during a ceremony at the science center and plan to deliver the space shuttle in the second half of 2012.

"NASA is pleased to share this wonderful orbiter with the California Science Center to help inspire a new generation of explorers," NASA Administrator Charles Bolden said in a statement. "The next chapter in space exploration begins now, and we're standing on the shoulders of the men and women of the shuttle program to reach farther into the solar system."

The California Science Center is one of four institutions across the country selected by Bolden to serve as the permanent home for NASA's space shuttle vehicles. Bolden announced his decision on April 12 of this year, the 30th anniversary of the first space shuttle launch in 1981.

"Endeavour now will begin its new mission to stimulate an interest in science and engineering in future generations at the science center," said California Science Center President Jeffrey Rudolph.

Endeavour flew its final space voyage in May, when the shuttle visited the International Space Station to deliver a $2 billion astrophysics experiment during NASA's STS-134 mission commanded by astronaut Mark Kelly. NASA built Endeavour to replace the shuttle Challenger, which exploded and broke apart just after liftoff in 1986 while carrying a crew of seven astronauts.

While Endeavour is destined for California, its sister ship Atlantis will be displayed at the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex in Florida. Discovery, the oldest and most-flown of NASA's shuttle fleet, will be sent to the Smithsonian Institution's National Air and Space Museum in Washington, D.C.

The museums had to commit to cover the $28.8 million cost of preparing and delivering a space shuttle for display.

NASA's Enterprise prototype shuttle, which was used for landing tests but never flew in space, will be sent to New York City to be displayed at the Intrepid Sea, Air & Space Museum. Enterprise is currently on display at the National Air and Space Museum's Steven F. Udvar-Hazy Center near Washington's Dulles International Airport. Enterprise will eventually be replaced by the shuttle Discovery, according to NASA's plan.

Los Angeles Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa signs the title transfer for space shuttle Endeavour during a ceremony at the California Science Museum on Tuesday. Endeavour will be permanently displayed at the science center after delivery in 2012.

One other NASA shuttle, the Columbia orbiter, broke apart in 2003 while returning its seven-astronaut crew to Earth. Damage to the shuttle's left wing heat shielding caused the accident, NASA later found.

NASA retired its space shuttles in July after the shuttle Atlantis returned to Earth to end the 135th and final mission of the space shuttle program. That mission delivered vital supplies to the crew of the International Space Station.

Space agency engineers are currently working on Discovery, Atlantis and Endeavour to make them museum-safe, work that includes removing propellant tanks that carried toxic rocket fuel.
Read More: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/44865141.../#.TpT0rbK3OCg
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  #432  
Old Posted Dec 17, 2011, 3:54 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Los Angeles Times



Science Center to exhibit space shuttle external fuel tank
Los Angeles Times
December 16, 2011 | 6:20 pm

Sapce shuttle with external fuel tank The California Science Center has won a new companion exhibit to the space shuttle Endeavour: the shuttle's external tank and twin solid rocket boosters.

The tank –- the orange cylindrical structure affixed to the shuttle's belly at launch –- and twin solid rocket boosters had been displayed at the Kennedy Space Complex visitors center, officials told The Times last week.

When the shuttle exhibit is assembled next year, it will be a challenge to ship the external tank from Florida. It is typically moved by barge, meaning it might have to be transported through the Panama Canal, said California Science Center President Jeffrey N. Rudolph.

"It's actually quite a bit longer than the shuttle," Rudolph said. The fuel tank is 153.8 feet long, and the orbiter is 122 feet.

Museum officials were happy at the award. But a major challenge is that shipping will add to the $200-million the museum needs to raise to transport the shuttle and build a new wing at the state-run museum in South Los Angeles.

"We're going for donations for everything," Rudolph said.

In October, when asked by The Times if he had a request of the Science Center, shuttle astronaut Mark Kelly, husband of Rep. Gabrielle Giffords (D-Ariz.) and Endeavour's last commander, said he hoped that the Los Angeles exhibit would be as authentic as possible.

"Try to get as authentic solid rocket boosters and the external tank as possible. I mean, there's certainly limitations. There are some spare parts that are out there. But if they could acquire, you know, the closest thing to real hardware to finish off that exhibit, that would just be incredible," Kelly said.
The museum intends to have Endeavour displayed vertically –- as if ready for launch -- when it is positioned in its permanent home in a new museum wing.

Rudolph thanked NASA for the gift. "Once this became clear that these were available, we said, well, we wanted them. They actually told us they might be available. A number of other places wanted them, but they chose to give them to us."

The external tank and solid rocket boosters were removed from the Kennedy Space Center Visitor Complex in November to make room for a new museum to house the retired space shuttle Atlantis. The tank and boosters had been on display at the Kennedy Space Center in Florida since the 1990s.

The external tank coming to Los Angeles was originally used for fit checks early in the shuttle program, officials said, and the solid rocket boosters include segments that have flown before, according to the museum.

The twin solid rocket boosters provided the power to lift the shuttle to an altitude of about 28 miles, then fell back to the ocean where they were recovered and reused, according to NASA.

The external tank is the gas tank for the shuttle's three main engines, and powers the shuttle to a height of 70 miles above Earth, NASA says. About 8.5 minutes after launch, the tank is ejected, and mostly disintegrates in the atmosphere.

It's expected that Endeavour will arrive in Los Angeles next fall and be paraded from Los Angeles International Airport through Inglewood to the Science Center, near USC. Until a permanent museum is built, Endeavour will be housed in a temporary building at the museum, and be displayed horizontally.
Read More: http://latimesblogs.latimes.com/lano...rnal-tank.html
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  #433  
Old Posted Jan 21, 2012, 4:33 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Los Angeles Times

Construction plans for downtown L.A. federal courthouse announced
Officials say the stalled project, which would fill a gaping hole in the Civic Center, can move forward with already appropriated funds. But a GOP congressman from the Central Valley plans a hearing.
By Richard Simon, Los Angeles Times
January 20, 2012

Reporting from Washington -- The long-stalled new federal courthouse in downtown Los Angeles will finally move forward, Washington officials announced Thursday, despite scrutiny from congressional Republicans looking for ways to cut the federal budget deficit.

The roughly $400-million project at 1st Street and Broadway, planned for more than a decade, would replace the Depression-era federal courthouse on Spring Street, which officials say has security and asbestos problems.

It would also fill an immense hole: The Junipero Serra State Office Building, considered seismically weak after the 1994 Northridge earthquake, was demolished in 2007, leaving a gaping cavity and a rainy-season pond occasionally inhabited by ducks.

The head of the U.S. General Services Administration, Martha Johnson, alerted members of Congress in a letter that the agency "intends to award a contract" to construct the new courthouse "to address the court's urgent housing and security needs in Los Angeles … with the funds previously appropriated to the project.''

Construction is likely to begin in the last quarter of 2012, a GSA spokesman said. Plans call for the courthouse to be ready for occupancy no later than March 2016.

Los Angeles officials, representatives and businesspeople were ecstatic.

"Fabulous! That's wonderful news! That's terrific!" said Carol Schatz, president and chief executive of the Central City Assn. "It's very welcome news because having a large hole in the ground right in the middle of the Civic Center of the second-largest city in the country has never been ideal.... It will breathe new life into that neighborhood."

Rep. Lucille Roybal-Allard (D-Los Angeles), who is among a group of California lawmakers championing the courthouse, said she was thrilled.

"This project will give an immediate, major boost to Los Angeles' economy, and we expect the courthouse to create thousands of new jobs in the construction industry and related businesses,'' she said.

But the proposed courthouse has been controversial of late. Rep. Jeff Denham, a Republican from Atwater in the San Joaquin Valley, introduced legislation last year to put the site up for sale at an estimated price of $25 million. That measure passed a House committee — and divided the California congressional delegation.

On Thursday, Denham called the courthouse "unnecessary" and a "perfect example of runaway government spending."

He contends that the project was based on a projected increase in judges that has not occurred. Courthouse supporters dispute that.

"Four hundred million dollars of taxpayer money is about to be wasted on a project that is not needed to house judges that do not exist," he said.

Denham, who chairs a House subcommittee that oversees public buildings, "fully intends to hold an oversight hearing where GSA will be invited to testify and where he will demand accountability on this issue," an aide said.

After the courthouse's projected cost ballooned to $1.1-billion in 2008, the design was scaled back. At one point, the project had included 54 courtrooms. Current plans call for a 600,000-square-foot facility with 24 courtrooms and 32 judges' chambers.

The GSA said that about $35 million has been spent on the land and courthouse design. The GOP-controlled House would be likely to oppose further appropriations.

But if, as the GSA contends, it can build the courthouse with money that has already been appropriated, it would not need to return to Congress.

Gerry Hertzberg, policy director for Los Angeles County Supervisor Gloria Molina, called the GSA decision "a great victory for downtown."

Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa thanked the Obama administration, saying the project would improve public safety, revitalize the Civic Center and "create thousands of much needed construction jobs."

City Councilwoman Jan Perry also praised the decision. "The best part is that it will bring new jobs, and that's the way to pull a city out of a recession and into a recovery," she said.

Both California senators, Democrats Barbara Boxer and Dianne Feinstein, also support the project.

Johnson, the GSA administrator, said the agency is considering options for the existing federal courthouse at 312 North Spring St. Officials have talked about renovating it to house executive branch agencies now in leased facilities, or perhaps selling it.

Gary Toebben, president and chief executive of the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce, praised Roybal-Allard's persistence.

"Nothing happens in Washington, D.C., without a champion," he said, "and Lucille has been that champion."
More: http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la...,3578144.story
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  #434  
Old Posted May 17, 2012, 1:35 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Los Angeles Downtown News

Are You Ready for Some Cycling?
Amgen Tour to Open Streets for World Class Racers, and For Everyone Else
Posted: Tuesday, May 15, 2012 6:00 am | Updated: 3:41 pm, Fri May 11, 2012.
by Ryan Vaillancourt
Los Angeles Downtown News

Downtown will be the site of the final sprint for 128 of the world’s fastest-pedaling cyclists who are competing in the 750-mile Amgen Tour of California. The eight-stage race, which started in San Francisco on May 13, culminates at L.A. Live, where the riders are expected to cross the finish line between 11 a.m. and noon.

This marks the first year that the tour will be on live television, courtesy of a deal with NBC. The network will cover the entire race, but only the final stage in Los Angeles will be broadcast live.

“There are international sporting events that bring stature and eyeballs and attention to communities and to show the world-class communities that host these events,” AEG spokesman Michael Roth said. “The Kentucky Derby is one of them. So is the Indy 500 and so is the Amgen Tour.”

AEG estimates that the event will generate about $100 million in economic activity throughout the state. It’s unclear how many spectators will take in the Los Angeles leg of the race, in part because the 44.7-mile route spans much of the region. It begins at 10 a.m. in Beverly Hills and tracks east on Sunset Boulevard through Hollywood before sending riders up Grand Avenue into Chinatown. The course curls into the Civic Center, sprints down Hill Street and eventually turns back north for a climb up Olive Street. Riders will cycle through the five-mile Downtown loop five times before the race is done. The finish line is on Figueroa Street at L.A. Live.
Read More: http://www.ladowntownnews.com/news/a...9bb2963f4.html

Video Link

Last edited by dragonsky; May 17, 2012 at 2:04 AM.
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  #435  
Old Posted May 18, 2012, 2:45 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Los Angeles Times

California Science Center gets gift for space shuttle's new home
The contribution to the new Air and Space Center that will house the space shuttle Endeavour comes from a foundation chaired by Lynda Oschin, wife of the late philanthropist Samuel Oschin.
By Rong-Gong Lin II, Los Angeles Times
May 17, 2012

The California Science Center has received what officials describe as an "extraordinary" financial contribution to the new Air and Space Center that will house the space shuttle Endeavour.

The gift, to be announced at a news conference Thursday, comes from a foundation chaired by Lynda Oschin, wife of the late Los Angeles businessman and philanthropist Samuel Oschin, whose name already graces the Griffith Observatory planetarium and the Cedars-Sinai Medical Center cancer institute stemming from charitable contributions there.

At Oschin's request, officials would not disclose the amount of the gift from the Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Oschin Family Foundation. But they called it "transformational" for the free state-run museum in South Los Angeles, adjacent to USC.

Officials say the Science Center has now raised, combined with other donations, nearly half of the $200 million it needs to transport Endeavour from Florida, build a temporary hangar, and design and construct a permanent museum wing that will house the spacecraft when it arrives this fall.

The new wing of the museum will be called the Samuel Oschin Air and Space Center and is expected to open in 2017. The interim hangar, being built now, will be called the Samuel Oschin Space Shuttle Endeavour Pavilion and will display the vehicle horizontally. Once it moves to the permanent wing the shuttle will be positioned vertically, as if prepared for launch, for generations of museum visitors to see.

Museum officials were thrilled at the donation.

"It's a huge boost," Science Center President Jeffrey N. Rudolph said. "It gives us enough money to ensure we can complete the architecture and exhibit design."

Plus, he said, "it lets others in the philanthropic community see that this project has real validity to it.... It's a vote of confidence to let people know that they can join in and have a high likelihood of success."
Read More: http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la...,6828431.story
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  #436  
Old Posted Jun 12, 2012, 2:53 AM
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Kings 6, Devils 1
After jumping out to a 3-0 series lead, the Kings finished off the Devils in Game 6 to win the first Stanley Cup in franchise history.
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  #437  
Old Posted Aug 5, 2012, 3:25 PM
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  #438  
Old Posted Aug 12, 2012, 12:45 AM
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  #439  
Old Posted Aug 22, 2012, 4:32 AM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Los Angeles Times

USC hopes new McKay Center is a big recruiting advantage
The $70-million state-of-the-art facility is formally dedicated Tuesday and Coach Lane Kiffin says of its recruiting advantages, 'I think we not only caught up, but we probably passed everybody.'
By Gary Klein
9:12 PM PDT, August 21, 2012

The school formally dedicated its gleaming $70-million John McKay Center, a 110,000-square-foot structure that features a floor dedicated to academic support, a basement with a gargantuan weight room, state-of-the-art athletic training facilities and plenty of tributes to former star athletes and five-star donors.

The two-story McKay Center will serve more than 600 athletes, who access entry via fingerprint identification.

But at its core, the building named for USC's legendary football coach is about attracting new talent.

John McKay won four national titles, including championships in 1972 and 1974 after Heritage Hall was completed.
Read More: http://www.latimes.com/sports/colleg...,0,14901.story
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Old Posted Aug 24, 2012, 1:52 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Los Angeles Times

Two new South L.A. parks are part of larger green-space campaign
Villaraigosa attends the ribbon cutting for two new parks where two foreclosed homes once stood in South L.A. He says they're the first of what will eventually be more than 50 new parks for the city.
By Jessica Garrison, Los Angeles Times

August 24, 2012

For years, the two foreclosed houses near 49th Street and McKinley Avenue in South Los Angeles were dilapidated eyesores like so many others in a neighborhood hard hit by the housing crisis. The ground underneath them was even contaminated with lead and asbestos.

Then, Thursday morning, a gaggle of laughing children hurtled across two new parks where the houses used to be. They were trailed by a beaming Mayor Antonio Villaraigosa and other dignitaries, one carrying a giant pair of ceremonial ribbon-cutting scissors. The parks are half a block from each other on either side of 49th Street Elementary School; one boasts exercise equipment for adults, the other a playground and grassy area for children.

The mayor said they were the first of what will eventually be more than 50 new parks for Los Angeles, an investment of more than $80 million and 170 acres, much of it in park-poor South Los Angeles neighborhoods where children have little space to play. Villaraigosa said he hoped that at least 16 of the parks will be completed by the time he leaves office next summer.

More than 35 of the proposed parks are tiny — under an acre — and many will also be built on vacant properties left blighted by foreclosure. Barry Sanders, president of the city's Recreation and Parks Commission, hailed the plan as a creative and ambitious way to "make lemonade" out of the housing crisis by scooping up land cheap. He also said it was a way of "attacking an injustice" by opening parks in poor neighborhoods that have historically had less recreation space than other parts of the city.
Read More: http://www.latimes.com/news/local/la...,5170315.story
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