San Diego Union-Tribune

CALIF. LAWMAKERS VACATING OFFICES FOR NEW BUILDING

Annex connected to Capitol since 1952 set for demolition

- BY ADAM BEAM

The Legislatur­e will reconvene in about a month, but staff are busy this week building boxes instead of bills as they work to quickly vacate their offices ahead of the scheduled demolition of their nearly 70-year-old workspace.

California’s Capitol was completed in 1874, and at the time it was big enough to hold most of state government, including the Legislatur­e, the executive branch and the state Supreme Court.

But as California grew into the nation’s most populous state following the Gold Rush and a pair of world wars, state government grew along with it. Agencies moved out as more buildings sprung up around the Capitol. In 1952, the Annex was connected to the Capitol, where it has housed lawmakers offices — including the governor — ever since.

That ends this year as part of a plan to demolish the Annex and replace it with a more modern structure that will comply with new rules designed to withstand earthquake­s and fires all while making the building more accessible for people with disabiliti­es.

In the meantime, the state built a $423.6 million office building about two blocks away from the Capitol

to house lawmakers and their staff during constructi­on. The Legislatur­e will still meet in their respective chambers in the state Capitol. But their offices, instead of just a few floors away, will be about two blocks away until at least 2025.

That’s if everything goes according to plan. Unforeseen constructi­on delays could keep them there much longer. And some environmen­tal and historical preservati­on groups have sued to block the project, worried about its impact on surroundin­g Capitol Park and some of the rare trees and plants that live there.

Lawmakers say Capitol Park’s most prominent trees will be protected. That includes the “moon tree” — a Redwood that grew from a seed that went to the moon on Apollo 14 and is now about 120 feet tall — and a grove of trees planted in 1897 that were taken from famous Civil War battlefiel­ds at Gettysburg and Fredericks­burg.

It was mostly quiet inside the doomed Annex on Monday as some offices have already relocated to the new office space. That includes the large bronze statue of a grizzly bear that stood in front of the governor’s office.

The bear, affectiona­tely known as “bacteria bear” for its ability to attract schoolchil­dren’s fingers, has been a tourist magnet since former Gov. Arnold Schwarzene­gger paid to install it more than a decade ago.

 ?? RICH PEDRONCELL­I AP ?? Workers box up a bronze statue of a grizzly bear in front of the governor’s office for relocation.
RICH PEDRONCELL­I AP Workers box up a bronze statue of a grizzly bear in front of the governor’s office for relocation.

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