The shuttered portion, beyond the Crystal Pier Hotel, underwent extensive stabilization work.
MORE STORIES
-
The elders who fought for the park's creation in the 1970s will take a seat, giving the younger generation of Chicanos a new beginning as community leaders.
-
The Supreme Court has preserved access to a drug used in the most common method of abortion, rejecting lower-court restrictions while a lawsuit continues.
-
California’s status as a safe haven for reproductive rights is in question as the U.S. Supreme Court mulls over whether mifepristone should be banned.
-
A grant from the FCC will help the San Diego Housing Commission expand affordable, quality and reliable broadband internet service to low-income families.
-
HerbNJoy is the latest licensed dispensary to open in the city — unless the city approves more licensures.
-
The California Assembly has voted to advance a bill to protect sexual assault survivors from retaliatory lawsuits. The legislation comes years after a former state lawmaker sued a woman over her sexual assault allegations against him.
-
Students activists stage a "Walkout for Climate" rally and cheer Chancellor Khosla’s desire to eliminate fossil-fuel power on campus by 2030.
-
The Center is playing an integral part in the recovery of the endangered Mexican gray wolf.
-
A bevy of new legislation takes aim at hidden fees across several industries. A growing body of research mostly shows that people spend more when fees are revealed later.
-
More planes took off in 2022 after the 11:30 p.m. curfew at San Diego International Airport than in any of the previous five years.
Sign up for our newsletters!
Keep up with all the latest news, arts and culture, and TV highlights from KPBS.
- Musk forms new party after split with Trump over tax and spending bill
- How this long-lost Chinese typewriter from the 1940s changed modern computing
- Inside the evolution of Biosphere 2, from '90s punchline to scientific playground
- At least 78 dead and dozens missing after catastrophic Texas flooding
- How good was the forecast? Texas officials and the National Weather Service disagree