Mesa Lane Partners and Dipaola Capital celebrated the grand opening of The LOOP, Isla Vista’s first privately owned, LEED-certified, and sustainability focused housing development, cutting the ribbon on the $17 million building Friday evening in front of a crowd of students, business owners, and government officials from across the county and state.
Neil Dipaola, chief executive officer and managing partner of Mesa Lane Partners, graduated from UCSB in 2006 with degrees in environmental science and public policy. The LOOP is his brain child, a highly sustainable mixed-use housing and retail building designed to offer a different standard of housing and living from Isla Vista’s typical environment.
Area government officials came out in force to see the building’s opening, as State Assemblymember Das Williams, 3rd District Supervisor Doreen Farr, Santa Barbara Mayor Helene Schneider, and several members of the Goleta and Santa Barbara planning commissions mingled with the crowd.
Jack Crosbie
From left to right: Supervisor Doreen Farr, Neil Dipaola of Mesa Lane Partners, and Assemblymember Das Williams at The Loops ribbon cutting ceremony
Farr and Williams, a personal friend of Dipaola, both said the project stood out from other developments in the area. “[Dipaola] could have made an easier path, he could have made a path where he made more money, but he took a path that is going to be something that this community is going to be proud of,” Williams said.
While LEED-certified buildings are not uncommon in Santa Barbara, Dipaola’s is the only privately financed student housing building to achieve certification. Farr said The LOOP was “the most cutting-edge green building project … we have ever seen.”
Dipaola’s project has been recognized at the state and national levels as well, winning the Governor’s California EPA Environmental and Economic Leadership Award and the Santa Barbara County Innovative Building Level III award.
Inside its walls, The LOOP holds a variety of private, semi-private, and shared bedroom suites leased out to students by the bed. It utilizes 40 percent less water than comparable buildings and is the first in the county to use “Phase Change” drywall materials, which fluctuate between liquid and solid insulation depending on the outside temperature to regulate indoor climate with minimal air conditioning. It is a mixed-use building, with the residences lofted a floor above several retail spaces available for rent.
According to Dipaola, balance between economics and environment has been a large theme of the project’s development. Dipaola said he thinks he has found the ingredients needed to create housing that satisfies both requirements as well as accommodating the needs of the communities it exists in.
“It’s really easy to build a cheap building; it’s even easier to build a expensive building,” Dipaola said. “What’s really difficult, though, is to build a building that is thoughtful toward the environment, is architecturally significant, and that is economically viable. And I think that with a lot of hard work … we’ve done just that. And that’s thinking big.”



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It is quite a building, amazing how fast it's gone up. Hopefully mixed use will become the norm.
Ken_Volok (anonymous profile)
August 27, 2012 at 12:21 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Everyone is talking about how this is so great because it's so sustainable, but it's not affordable at all! Beds start at $900 per month. Sustainability is meaningless if it's inaccessible to most people. Everyone gets a fancy tv??? Living sustainably doesn't come from building materials... it needs to be a larger social shift.. It's sharing resources, and reducing waste and making sure that "sustainability" isn't out of reach of poor people.
Plus, THE BUILDING IS HUGE A DUMB AND UGLY.
slosh (anonymous profile)
August 27, 2012 at 12:52 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Remember Alberto's? And the various surf and bikini shops?
Ken_Volok (anonymous profile)
August 27, 2012 at 1:20 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Tio Albertos across from the Cantina! I liked their burritos better than Freebird's (which were good too). This brings back memories of "boat races" @Woodstock's and other stupid beer-related college activities.
EastBeach (anonymous profile)
August 27, 2012 at 3:06 p.m. (Suggest removal)
LEEDS certification might mean the windows don't open. And that means no water balloon bombs from the 5th floor :)
The three new buildings are being built by Beverly Hills developer The Icon Company with private backers/partners such as those mentioned in the article:
http://www.theiconcompany.com/site/20...
Their niche market is upscale mixed-use student housing. There's another Icon development planned for Cal Poly SLO.
EastBeach (anonymous profile)
August 27, 2012 at 3:19 p.m. (Suggest removal)
Isla Vista gets its own Chapala One.
John_Adams (anonymous profile)
August 28, 2012 at 9:19 a.m. (Suggest removal)
The LOOP was actually developed by Mesa Lane Partners, a boutique developer here in town. Mesa Lane Partners specializes in building green student housing and is about to launch a $500 million real estate investment fund to bring more mixed-use projects like the LOOP to the tri-county area and around the country.
Find out more information at www.mesalanepartners.com
ryan_bikes (anonymous profile)
August 28, 2012 at 9:24 a.m. (Suggest removal)
Sorry Slosh, but $900 bucks for a bed is actually market rate or cheaper for IV. When you're paying $1,000 to share a room on Del Playa, I'd take this any day of the week. At least it wouldn't smell like mold and weed (not yet anyway).
sbdude (anonymous profile)
August 28, 2012 at 10:45 a.m. (Suggest removal)
At least one thing is consistent to the area. UCSB has some of the ugliest architecture of campuses across the USA. This building carries that tradition into Isla Vista.
SezMe (anonymous profile)
August 29, 2012 at 12:19 p.m. (Suggest removal)
I will need to walk around it, but based on Crosbie's photos the buildings hardly look ugly.
They look very nice on my screen.
And considering the mostly decrepit surroundings, my guess is this is a vast improvement for the 'hood.
binky (anonymous profile)
August 29, 2012 at 12:53 p.m. (Suggest removal)
In one of my UCSB classes we watched Robert Hughes' documentary on Modern Art "The Shock of the New". During a screening of an installment dealing with architecture, lo and behold suddenly the UCSB campus itself was onscreen, if not the very building we were in- as an example of very bad modern architecture! Akin to Nazi architect Albert Speer I believe Hughes said.
Needless to say, the newer buildings are much better and this new one in "the Loop" looks cool.
Ken_Volok (anonymous profile)
August 29, 2012 at 1:34 p.m. (Suggest removal)