The gift from downtown developer
Sonny Astani will nurture a vision of sustainable ‘megacities.’
Source :: USC News
Date :: 11.29.2007
By :: By Eric Mankin
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“This is a gift to both USC and
Los Angeles," said Astani, who earned his master's at
the university in 1978. |
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Photo/Gary Leonard |
Sonny Astani, whose soaring high-rises and philanthropy
are remaking downtown Los Angeles, has given $17 million to name
the USC department of civil and environmental engineering.
This is the fourth department naming gift for
the school since it began its $300-million fund-raising initiative
in 2001.
USC President Steven B. Sample hailed the gift
by Astani, who earned a master’s degree in industrial and
systems engineering from USC in 1978, two years after arriving
in the United States from his native Iran.
“Sonny Astani is a remarkable Trojan who
is transforming Los Angeles,” Sample said. “He understands
the crucial role civil and environmental engineers must play as
more and more people live in cities. We are deeply grateful at
USC not only for his exceptional gift but for his majestic vision
of urban life.”
Yannis C. Yortsos, dean of the USC Viterbi School,
expressed his gratitude for the gift and said the department would
be known as the Sonny Astani Department of Civil and Environmental
Engineering.
“Thirty years ago, by mere good fortune,
I ended up in the best university, in the best city, in the best
country in the world,” Astani said. “This is a gift
to both USC and Los Angeles. It is my hope that it will allow a
new generation of civil and environmental engineers to rise to
the increasingly complex challenges created by the urbanization
of Los Angeles and the changes to the global environment we are
now facing.”
Yortsos noted that civil engineering, the oldest
engineering discipline, remains the branch of engineering that
is closest to the lives of people, particularly in cities.
“Civil engineers provide homes, water,
sanitation, bridges, tunnels, roads and civil infrastructure and
environmental engineering expertise is critical to solving problems
of pollution and micro-climate,” he said.
“By 2030 almost five billion people, or
60 percent of the entire world, will live in cities. This raises
huge challenges for civil and environmental engineers, challenges
now known in the profession as those of ‘megacities,’ he
explained. “Internationally we see an emerging vision for
civil and environmental engineering as a major force for improvement
and enhancement of cities, not only for Los Angeles, but for major
urban centers around the world.”
And, Yortsos continued, “Astani shares
our belief that civil engineering is vital to achieve a critical
need for the 21st century: cities designed to be highly functional,
healthful and inspiring; environments that celebrate humanity.”
Astani is the chairman of Astani Enterprises,
a Beverly Hills-based development concern. His firm owns or operates
approximately 4,000 apartment units throughout Southern California
and is currently developing approximately 2,000 units of condominiums
and lofts in downtown Los Angeles with a total value in excess
of $1 billion.
Among the developments are five iconic residential
towers and two loft buildings.
Last year, Astani Enterprises made a $1.5 million
donation to the Skid Row Housing Trust, completing funding for
the Abbey Apartments, a downtown complex that will house 115 of
Los Angeles’ mentally ill homeless when it opens next year.
Astani, an Iranian immigrant who received a Distinguished
Alumnus Award from the USC Viterbi School, serves on the executive
committee of the Central City Association, the board of councilors
of the USC Viterbi School of Engineering and on the Leadership
Council for USC’s Lusk Center for Real Estate Development.
He is also a board member of the Pacific Council for International
Affairs.
The Astani donation is the seventh multimillion-dollar
donation from a USC engineering alumnus in the last six years,
following earlier gifts by Andrew J. Viterbi (naming the school);
Daniel J. Epstein, Ming Hsieh and John Mork (naming the departments
of industrial and systems engineering, electrical engineering,
and chemical engineering and materials science); Mark Stevens (creating
the USC Stevens Institute) and Kenneth Klein (creating the USC
Viterbi Center for Undergraduate Engineering Life).
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