Building a Village
A new chapter of student life begins with the grand opening of USCrsquo;s largest residential living complex.
At the heart of the new USC Village stands a single, grand oaka tree that, for centuries, has symbolized strength and endurance across cultures. Several months ago, we lowered it into the ground, allowing its roots to find their place long before the first class of 2,500 students moved in to the sites eight residential colleges. As their classes began, the oak sat firmly settled, ready to flourish in the coming decades.
So much about this project relied on forethought. In conceiving USC Village, we had many goals, but chief among them was our students personal growth. Their time at USCthose years between ages 18 and 22is profoundly transformative, so we created a world-class living and learning environment, a place that would help them realize their full, extraordinary potential. With USC Village, we made a tremendous investment in student residential life, one that would pay dividends not only for our students intellectual, creative and social development, but for our local communities as well.
Indeed, USC Village serves our surrounding communities. It provides much-needed retail and dining options, including a Trader Joes and Target. It stands as the largest economic development project in the history of south Los Angeles. At the peak of construction, 550 construction workers reported to the site each morning, and most were local; 20 percent lived within five miles of the project, 38 percent lived in the city of Los Angeles, and the vast majority74 percentlived within the county.
Who could have imagined the scope of their work? They laid 1.2 million miles of wires, coursing with electricity and data, and poured 110,000 cubic yards of concretemore than enough to pave a sidewalk to San Francisco. Their work produced the Central Piazza three times the size of Hahn Plazaat the center of USC Village, one that, for generations, will serve as a meeting point in which our students can interact, collaborate and dream.
And this is a dream USC shares with its neighbors. We will forever recall that historic morning when 1,100 community members converged at City Hall to voice their support. Many had lived in the area for more than three decades, and knew that USC Village would bring neighborhood enhancements, as well as jobs and businesses. Their passionharnessed by our local elected officialsadvanced approvals for this project.
We thank them wholeheartedly, and we thank our extraordinary benefactors. Kathleen Leavey McCarthy led the way in naming McCarthy Honors College, along with David Bohnett, Jessie and Charles Cale, Ray and Ghada Irani, and Shelly and Ofer Nemirovsky. They all provided naming gifts for the residential colleges, as did two anonymous donorsone of whom named a residence hall in honor of A.C. Cowlings.
Thanks to these and other benefactorsas well as the dedication of our entire Trojan FamilyUSC created a home away from home for our students, a community that will prove the value of a campuscentered education. It will surely become the envy of American higher education.