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Glendale OKs major Disney expansion
City backs Disney plans
The 338,000-square-foot project includes a six-story office building, a five-story wing and a six-story parking garage, to be added onto the company's creative campus in the San Fernando Road corridor.
By Zain Shauk, Los Angeles Times May 13, 2010
The Glendale City Council this week gave its blessing to a proposed 338,000-square-foot expansion of Walt Disney Co.'s creative campus.
The plans call for a six-story office building walled largely in glass, landscaping with palm trees and a park-like area for outdoor activities.
"It's a beautiful project," Councilwoman Laura Friedman, chairwoman of the Glendale Redevelopment Agency, said during a public hearing on the development. "It's going to look terrific and certainly improve the area aesthetically."
The expansion will include the main six-story building, a five-story wing with a basement and a six-story parking garage with solar panels.
Disney representatives said they expected to break ground in September.
"This project will not only enable the physical transformation of the San Fernando Road corridor, but will also provide fiscal benefits that will contribute to the vitality" of the area, said Neil Jurgens, vice president of design and delivery for Disney.
Disney said the expansion would bring 1,200 new jobs to the creative campus, in addition to about 200 construction jobs.
Disney's 125-acre campus in northwest Glendale houses the headquarters of KABC-TV and other entertainment properties. The proposed expansion is the second phase of a project to redevelop an area around the city's historic Grand Central Air Terminal. Disney plans to eventually develop up to 5.95 million square feet of offices and outdoor space.
City backs Disney plans
No officials criticize planned campus expansion, which is expected to begin in September.
By Zain Shauk, Glendale News Press
Published: Last Updated Tuesday, May 11, 2010 11:11 PM PDT
The City Council on Tuesday strongly endorsed a proposed 338,000-square-foot expansion to Walt Disney Co.s creative campus.
The plans included drawings of a six-story office building walled largely in glass and neighbored by a carefully crafted landscaped area that included towering palm trees and a dense park-like area that would provide a shaded space for outdoor activities.
No city officials criticized the plan and all said they were impressed by the designs, which were prepared by renowned firms Bohlin Cywinski Jackson, Arup and SWA Group, firms responsible for designing major university buildings, hospitals and the Olympic Water Cube in Beijing.
Its a beautiful project, Councilwoman Laura Friedman, chairwoman of the Glendale Redevelopment Agency, said during a joint public hearing for the development. Its going to look terrific and certainly improve the area aesthetically.
The new building, in which Disney expects to house 1,200 workers, will be coupled with the new landscaping developments, a water fountain and a six-story parking garage with an array of photovoltaic solar panels.
The office building will include a main six-story wing and a five-story wing with a basement.
Disney representatives said they expected to break ground in September.
This project will not only enable the physical transformation of the San Fernando Road corridor, but will also provide fiscal benefits that will contribute to the vitality [of the area], said Neil Jurgens, vice president of design and delivery for Disney.
In addition to the 1,200 new jobs for the creative campus, the Burbank-based media giants expansion would also generate about 200 construction jobs, Jurgens said.
The expansion is part of Disneys 125-acre campus in northwest Glendale that currently includes the headquarters of KABC-TV and two 125,000-square-foot buildings completed on Flower Street in 2006.
It is the second phase in a project to redevelop an area around the citys historic Grand Central Air Terminal. Disney plans to eventually develop up to 5.95 million square feet of offices and outdoor spaces in the area.
The city has already spent months overhauling the San Fernando corridor in anticipation of the expanded development, overseeing a largely state-funded $44-million project to build a bridge from the Ventura (134) Freeway Fairmont Avenue offramp to Flower Streets. Crews have also been modifying other roadways to better accommodate the influx of Disney employees.
The latest project will bring Disneys total amount of developed space to 2.5 million square feet, leaving quite a lot of opportunity for more, Jurgens said.
Disneys plans came with requests for zoning variances to allow for a height concession to accommodate for the possibility of solar panels on the parking garage, a change in the sloping requirement for the parking structure, and the ability to place larger and more signs than city restrictions allow.