The Mercury News

University of Heroes gets city’s final OK

- By Aaron Kinney akinney@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SAN MATEO — Members of the incoming class at the Draper University of Heroes can go ahead and book their flights.

Venture capitalist Tim Draper’s entreprene­urial school got its final OK late Monday night from the city of San Mateo, clearing the way for the unique educationa­l institutio­n to open April 17. After squeezing more money out of Draper to fund a new agency to manage downtown parking and traffi c problems, the City Council gave the project an enthusiast­ic blessing.

The school will now finish remodeling its three- building campus and choose the remaining candidates for its inaugural class of up to 180 students. The class already includes youths from Nigeria and Venezuela.

“We are focused on recruiting the best students and speakers from around the world,” Carol Lo, the school’s chief operating officer, said in an email Tuesday, “and designing a mind- blowing experience.”

The council’s support was near- unanimous, voting 5- 0 and 4- 1 to approve the conditions for the school. Councilman Brandt Grotte, who voiced several concerns, including worries about the long- term viability of Draper University, provided a solitary vote of dissent.

Councilman Jack Matthews embraced the risk inherent in the groundbrea­king project, calling it a startup that will create startups.

“I really think this project will revitalize Third Avenue and bring new energy to our downtown,” he said.

The school, designed to create independen­t- minded risk- takers, will run four eight- week sessions a year out of the newly refurbishe­d Benjamin Franklin Hotel and a Tudor- style building that once housed an antiques shop, both on Third Avenue. A small building on Fourth Avenue will be used for administra­tion and a school store. Draper purchased the buildings for $ 15.15 million.

The council agreed to let Draper replace the old hotel signs atop the nine- story edifice with new signs bearing the name of the institutio­n. Mayor David Lim said the historical signifi cance of the building — built nearly a century ago and last used by United Airlines employees until the 1990s — is not so great as to prevent its new owner from putting his stamp on it.

Deputy Mayor Robert Ross asked Draper to pay the entire $ 60,000 in seed money to start a new Transporta­tion Management Agency, but the founder of Draper Fisher Jurvetson balked. Draper agreed instead to chip in $ 30,000 toward the agency, doubling his previous offer, and took Lim up on his suggestion that students at the school spend time brainstorm­ing ways to solve one of the city’s most vexing problems: its lack of parking spaces downtown.

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