Kate Cagle
Daily Press Staff Writer
The City Council will review a plan Tuesday to add 200 public charging ports for electric vehicles (EVs) to the city by 2020, with
Week of November 6, 2017
Street Lighting Modernization Program
For the week of November 6, construction will Construction will continue throughout the project area, which is bound by 16th Street
Kate Cagle
Daily Press Staff Writer
The population in Los Angeles County will grow by more than one million people over the next twenty years, according to a preliminary forecast
By CHARLES ANDREWS
ADOBE NOT IVY
Would describe the look of the University of New Mexico in Albuquerque, which finally, if reluctantly, granted me a degree, after a nearly decade-long
Week of October 23, 2017
For the week of October 23, construction will Construction will continue throughout the project area, which is bound by 16th Street to the east, Ocean
Week of October 16, 2017
Street Lighting Modernization Program
For the week of October 16, construction will Construction will continue throughout the project area, which is bound by 16th Street
More mixed use projects before Planning Commission
Kate Cagle
Daily Press Staff Writer
The City’s largest housing developer will be back in front of the Planning Commission Wednesday, seeking
Santa Monica will move forward with plans for an ambitious $77 million City Services Building, promising to break ground with one of the greenest structures in the United States, after
Threat of the “big one” looms over Rent Control Board discussions
Kate Cagle
Daily Press Staff Writer
With the images of Mexico City’s devastating earthquake still fresh in everyone’
Parking by the Pacific tops concerns over big City projects this week
Kate Cagle
Daily Press Staff Writer
Two major City projects south of Interstate 10 will appear before the
Week of September 25, 2017
Street Lighting Modernization Program
For the week of September 25, construction will continue throughout the project area, which is bound by 16th Street to the
You may think his (or her) victims were easy prey.
Newly planted and naturally silent, the nearly two-dozen trees found broken and decapitated in Santa Monica this week were not