Diverse Research Now Looks to Bring Racial Equity to Medical Trials

In the early 1950s, a doctor at Johns Hopkins Hospital sampled cells from Henrietta Lacks, a young Black woman dying of cervical cancer. Those samples became the basis for the polio vaccine, in vitro fertilization, gene mapping, and other breakthroughs in biomedical research—but the cells were taken
Read MoreA Perfect House, High Above Noe Valley, $6.3M

Since the Dot-Com Boom of the late 90—its later implosion—the 2008 financial crash, and the subsequent recovery of the economy, San Francisco’s charming Noe Valley and its surrounding hillsides have remained one of the town’s most valued and resilient neighborhoods. Thanks to strict development and
Read MoreUCSD Studying The Links Between Global Warming & Pollutants in Fish

The world’s oceans are in trouble—this we know. What we’re less sure about are the best ways to protect our waters and the delicious fish that call them home.But San Diego is on the case.This April, UC San Diego was awarded a $7.35 million multidisciplinary grant from the National Science Foundation
Read MoreCan You Predict the Future Health of Your Child? These Scientists Say Yes

If you were given the chance to see into the future, would you take it? For new parents Mandy and Morgan Moseley, the answer was yes. When their baby was just two months old, the couple turned to Fore Genomics for a glimpse of what might be on the horizon. “I have a lot of health issues in my family
Read MoreHow the San Diego Zoo’s Platypuses Are Helping Save Their Species

“[Platypuses] are all kinds of wrong,” says Hendrik Nollens, vice president of Wildlife Health with San Diego Zoo Wildlife Alliance. “They’re a mammal, they lay eggs, they have a mouth that looks like the bill of a duck, the males are venomous…” Still, watching the Frankensteined critters—the only t
Read More17 Things to Do in San Diego This Weekend: Oct. 17–20

Celebrate the best part of the week with 17 exciting things to do in San Diego, from a bunch of boozy festivals to a Stranger Things–inspired musical and a gathering of zine makers and enthusiasts, plus several other San Diego events.Food & Drink | Concerts & Festivals | Theater & Art Exhibits | Mor
Read More10 of the Best Wedding Venues in San Diego

If you’ve recently gotten engaged, congratulations! And if you’re planning to celebrate your nuptials locally, you’re in luck—almost every kind of wedding venue can be found within a 15-mile radius of most neighborhoods.Thanks to our consistently temperate weather, conveniently located airport, and
Read MorePalomar Health to Open New USD Wellness Center

Palomar Health knows most things are better with friends. In 2025, the organization is partnering with the University of San Diego to open the Palomar Health Wellness Center, an 80,000-square-foot, multipurpose facility providing wellness resources for the USD campus community and beyond. Sports, co
Read MoreRady Children’s Hospital to Open New $1.2B Facility in 2028

For Rady Children’s Hospital, the future means expansion. In August of last year, Rady broke ground on a new, seven-story tower. The facility, estimated to cost upwards of $1.2 billion, will house 140 intensive care unit beds and four operating rooms, doubling the size of the emergency department an
Read MoreDocument proposing a $425M arena at SDSU Mission Valley sheds new light on old idea

Nearly three years ago, a powerhouse sports and entertainment venue developer approached influential affiliates of San Diego State University with a proposal to design, build, finance and operate a state-of-the-art arena on the school’s Mission Valley campus.In December 2021, Oak View Group laid out
Read More6 San Diego ZIP codes make list of the nation’s priciest

Crack open a tin of caviar because several San Diego areas have made a list of the most expensive places to own a home.For the first time, six San Diego County ZIP codes made PropertyShark’s annual list of the 100 most expensive areas. The previous record was five ZIPs in 2023.This year’s list featu
Read MoreUnhinged, A Dating Series: What Sober Dating Taught Me

SDM staff writer and guest author Danielle Allaire takes over the column this week. One night, at a bar in South Park, I saw a tall, indie-rock Viking sporting a canvas tote bag and decided that this progressive-leaning, vinyl-collecting man was going to be mine. Within minutes, he introduced himsel
Read MoreUCSD Develops Plastic-Eating Bacteria to Eliminate Pollution

Since the early 1900s, plastic has accomplished unprecedented feats of world domination and changed the trajectory of planetary evolution. It’s in our homes, clothes, food, landfills, oceans, and even bodies, in numbers exceeding nine billion tons. The problem, of course, is getting rid of plastic.
Read MoreEric Lloyd Wright’s Ross House In Silver Lake

Recently—and very briefly on the market—Eric Lloyd Wright’s c.1957 Ruth Ross House is likely the young architect’s first independent project, an elegant but compact expansion of a c.1927 casita with spectacular views over the Reservoir. Eric may have been the grandson of the celebrated Frank Lloyd W
Read MoreSalk Institute’s “Super” Plants Hope to Combat Climate Change

When Wolfgang Busch first became mesmerized by plant roots as a young scientist, he didn’t realize they could potentially help save the world. He was captivated by how, without a brain, they could do things like actively track down nutrients. Now, he believes the simple root—the unsung underground h
Read MoreWith eyes on University City, Irvine Company ready to offload 2 more downtown buildings

A Southern California real estate behemoth wants to offload two more of its downtown San Diego office buildings as it focuses its attention on development opportunities farther north in University City.On Thursday, Irvine Company listed for sale its 40- and 50-year-old towers near Horton Plaza at 10
Read MoreSouthern California inflation rate dips to 2.4%, lowest since February 2021

“Swift swings” takes a quick peek at one economic trend.The number: Southern California’s inflation rate hit a 28-month low in September.The source: My trusted spreadsheet looked at three local Consumer Price Indexes – Los Angeles and Orange counties, Inland Empire, and San Diego County – and combin
Read More56% of California renters slammed by housing costs vs. 35% of homeowners

“How expensive?” tracks measurements of California’s totally unaffordable housing market.The pain: Slightly more than half of California tenants pay 30% or more of their income for housing costs, compared with roughly one-third of homeowners.The source: My trusty spreadsheet looked at the latest Cen
Read More‘Loophole’ in state law opens door to 22-story high-rise in Pacific Beach

A Los Angeles developer is seeking to erect a 22-story high-rise with a combination of hotel rooms and apartments above ground-floor shops blocks from the coast in Pacific Beach, flouting a voter-enacted law that has long kept building heights at 30 feet or less in the beach community.Last month, re
Read More44% of California renters ‘not satisfied’ with their finances vs. 22% of homeowners

California renters are twice as glum about their monetary picture than Golden State homeowners, a new survey shows.The Public Policy Institute of California’s statewide polling for September reinforces a key economic divide – renters vs. homeowners. Consider that 44% of renters told pollsters they’r
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