The gift to the engineering school will allow the university
to take an organized, academic approach to examining the world's
largest urban areas.
Source :: LA Times dot com
Date :: 11.29.2007
By :: Jason Song, Los Angeles Times Staff Writer
Real estate developer Sonny Astani frequently
used his USC engineering degree during his career. He would examine
zoning regulations at potential projects, find solutions for parking
problems, study elevator shafts. "Engineers were surprised
that a broker knew more than they did," he said.
That background, plus his work on a $400-million
mixed-use project in downtown Los Angeles, are the driving forces
behind his $17-million donation to USC to advance the study of "megacities."
For Astani, the need for such study became apparent
when he started developing the Concerto complex on Figueroa Street.
Building the 619-unit project in the middle of downtown was such
a daunting task that Astani began consulting with engineers, reading
books and even taking a few classes at his alma mater.
"There really are no guidelines, so I had
to learn a lot of new things," said Astani, who earned his
master's degree from USC in 1978.
The process convinced Astani, the president of
Astani Enterprises, that a new generation of engineers was needed
to tackle future projects in Los Angeles and other big cities.
His gift is prompting USC's engineering school to name an engineering
department after him and dedicate it to the study of urban areas
that have 10 million or more residents.
There are 15 megacities worldwide, including
Los Angeles and New York.
It's unclear how many universities have engineering
departments focusing on large cities, but Los Angeles could benefit
from an organized, academic approach to the subject, said Joel
Kotkin, a presidential fellow in urban futures at Chapman University
in Orange.
The gift is scheduled to be announced today.
USC had already been focusing more academic energy
on studying megacities in recent years, but Astani's gift will
provide a significant boost, said Jean-Pierre Bardet, the chair
of USC's civil engineering program.
"We can say that Los Angeles is our laboratory," he
said.
Astani, 52, said he hoped his gift would encourage
more students to think about engineering creatively and that it
could help develop guidelines for the future, either in city halls
or the private sector, in Los Angeles or other megacities across
the globe.
"If they say, 'This is the way to do it,'
developers will listen," Astani said.
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