November 3, 2025
Santa Monica College Celebrates New Mathematics + Science Building With Open House Nov. 1, 2025

Santa Monica College Celebrates New Mathematics + Science Building With Open House
110,000 Sq.Ft. LEED Gold-Certified Building Includes New Planetarium & Observatory Featuring a Best-in-Class Telescope
SANTA MONICA, CA—Santa Monica College (SMC) celebrated its new state-of-the-art LEED Gold-certified Mathematics + Science Building on its Main Campus at 1900 Pico Boulevard with an open house held Saturday, Nov. 1, 2025. Built with
funding from voter-approved bond measures AA, V, and the State of California, this building brings together four departments—Earth Sciences, Mathematics, Life Sciences, and Physical Sciences—under one roof for the very first time.
Housed in this building, the new Santa Monica College Planetarium and Observatory features a 0.7-meter CDK700 telescope, the only such telescope available to the public in this region of Los Angeles. The building also won a design award in 2024 from the Los Angeles Business Council in the “under construction category.”
At a ribbon-cutting ceremony preceding the open house and presentations, Chair of the SMC Board of Trustees Dr. Nancy Greenstein said: “Each community member who voted for bond measures AA and V demonstrated their
belief in SMC’s lifechanging mission, and that the opportunity to innovate, to shine,
and to pursue the best-possible higher education should be open to all.”
SMC Superintendent/President Dr. Kathryn E. Jeffery noted that the building was “designed to inspire and to represent SMC’s vision of
education: the striving toward a better, more sustainable future while staying true
to a shared past.” The new Mathematics + Science building features a seamless integration
and restoration of the Memorial Clocktower. Dedicated shortly before Memorial Day in 1955, the clocktower commemorates SMC student veterans who lost their lives in World War II and the Korean War.
“[This building] stands as a testament to what happens when education reaches outward
toward the future while remaining rooted in the pursuit of truth, in the unbiased
government of evidence, and in curiosity,” Vice President of Academic Affairs Jason Beardsley said, also drawing attention to what it contains: “Inside you’ll find 22 classrooms
and 11 laboratories equipped with the newest tools for learning — from document cameras
that let professors project live experiments onto high-definition displays, to channel
glass walls that flood rooms with natural light, creating spaces where ideas, equations,
and most importantly, minds, can grow.”
Beardsley stated that the new PlaneWave CDK700 telescope “opens a true window to the universe and puts Santa Monica College in the company
of research universities around the world . . . our planetarium features a Digistar 7 projection system — the same technology used at Griffith Observatory — further linking SMC to a global network of research institutions and universities.”
He quoted Professor of Astronomy Simon Balm who shared that “the new facility transforms astronomy from something you read about
to something you experience.”
Math Professor and Assistant Department Chair Brian Rodas—who has been teaching at SMC for over 24 years—noted that this building is long overdue.
“To say that this space has transformed the teaching-learning experience is truly
an understatement,” he said, adding that the building provides more rooms with Hyflex capabilities, which allows instructors to teach students both in-person and online
at the same time. “As you probably know, a very large percentage of SMC students are
first-generation, and many hold down part-time jobs while pursuing an education here
to make a better life for themselves and their families,” Rodas added.
Professor of Chemistry and Department Chair of Physical Sciences Dr. Jennifer Hsieh spoke on behalf of the three science departments making use of the new building.
“In partnership with our scientist-colleagues in the Departments of Earth and Life
Sciences, we now have the opportunity to realize three key goals: advancing cross-disciplinary
collaboration, developing innovative pedagogy, and finding the inspiration for our
future courses and programming,” Dr. Hsieh said, pointing out that her department
alone gained two new labs and an additional lecture space, rooms “designed to be fresh,
bright, and filled with natural light.”



Giving just one example, Dr. Hsieh noted that “the physics lab was designed to accommodate
the entire physics for engineering sequence, which includes red lights and blackout
curtains for optics work.”
The Mathematics + Science Building had its soft opening in late 2024, and began serving
students then. The building includes 22 classrooms, 11 labs, study areas, and advanced
instructional technology in addition to the planetarium and observatory.
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About Santa Monica College:
Santa Monica College is a California Community College accredited by the Accrediting Commission for Community and Junior Colleges (ACCJC). For 34 consecutive years, SMC has been California’s leading transfer college to UCLA, UC Berkeley, and other University of California campuses. The college also tops in transfers to the University of Southern California and Loyola Marymount University and is the top feeder west of the Mississippi to the Ivy League Columbia University. SMC offers more than 110 career education-focused degrees and certificates, and is the leading job trainer on Los Angeles’s Westside. The College provides news and cultural enrichment through its NPR radio station KCRW (89.9 FM), The Eli & Edythe Broad Stage at the SMC Performing Arts Center, and lifelong learning through distinctive programs such as its Emeritus Program for older adults.
Watch on YouTube: SMC Mathematics and Science Building