The oldest task in human history: to live on a piece of land without spoiling it.
-Aldo Leopold
I’m conflicted on Newhall Ranch. On the one hand, I probably wouldn’t have an affordable home in this nice community if it weren’t for Newhall Land’s Valencia development. In fact, the Santa Clarita Valley would be little more than a backwater land of inchoate, thoughtless developments if it wasn’t for Newhall Land and their high quality “master plan” which shaped the landscape of the SCV decades ago. This fact gives Newhall Land credibility to develop Newhall Ranch in my mind.
There’s also this other feeling I have as someone who has lived in the Western United States all my life. It’s in our nature as westerners and Americans, as beneficiaries of Manifest Destiny, to expand and to grow. On a gut level, I look at the landscape of Newhall Ranch and I think to myself, “It’s not doing much now. Let’s make it productive and build something great” which is pretty much the story of how the Western United States -and the Santa Clarita Valley- grew and became prosperous. And I admire Newhall Land’s ability & vision to take that risk and to create something out of nothing.
On the other hand, I tend to think that developments like Newhall Ranch (and Valencia for that matter) may be obsolete. With global climate change, increasing fuel costs, difficulty in getting water, and ever-increasing traffic, is there a market for far-flung suburban development in 2010? How about 2020 or 2050? Oh sure, Newhall Land promises that the Ranch will be different, it will not be sprawl, it will be built with local jobs available, but is that really the case? They also promise that much of the land back there behind Magic Mountain will be left as open space, but isn’t it all open space now? Why change it?
I had all this in mind as John B. and I asked to go on tour of the SCV’s back country, the property Henry Mayo Newhall and his sons received from the Spanish. It’s gone by many names over the years: from Rancho San Francisco to Portrero Valley to all the new names Newhall Land wants to apply to the various communities it hopes to build starting in a few years.
John and I wanted to document the landscape before it gets developed and we wanted to learn whether Newhall Ranch is feasible in an economic sense and responsible in an environmental sense. This post will feature photos of that back country with detailed captions; John will follow up with his more specific thoughts on what Newhall Land is planning later.
Hope you enjoy.

Our tour started in some pepper fields just south of Highway 126. This area will be the site of Landmark Village, the first development in Newhall Land's 21,000 Newhall Ranch project

Our tour was hosted by two Newhall Land developers. They helped us visualize where each development would go, and emphasized the amount of open space NL will preserve

One of the concerns SCOPE and a myriad of others have expressed about Newhall Ranch is that it will impact the river. The two developers we were with were quick to point out that Landmark Village development won't be that close to the river; they compared the proximity to what is currently built in Bridgeport, where there is several hundred feet between the riverbed and the streets

We spotted a lone coyote patrolling the fields as we entered the Ranch, a not-so-subtle reminder that this is a largely wild landscape

To get to the back side of Newhall Ranch, you have to cross some locked gates and cattle guards. Looking at the territory on a map, you get the feeling that it's a really large space, but once we were actually back there, it felt significantly more constrained by the hills and mountains. And yet you couldn't help but feel that this is what parts of Santa Clarita must have looked like before Valencia

A shot of what is called Potrero Valley, which is the site of Newhall Ranch's last (and possibly largest) Potrero Village development in Newhall Ranch. As you can see, even in the back country there is no escaping Edison's electrical lines and towers

From parts of Potrero Valley, you can see evidence of the SCV, which was rather disconcerting. We drove so far back into the ranch we thought we were miles from the SCV, but in reality, Stevenson Ranch (developed by NL's rivals) was just over a ridge

In the center of Potrero Valley is a rather strange little series of buildings. Keep in mind Newhall Ranch is an "active ranch" as NL reminds everyone; these buildings are used by authentic cowboys as they go about their authentic cowboy business. Yes. Authenticity in the SCV at last!

Cattle freely roam much of the territory back there, hearkening back to Newhall Land's earlier core business. Does anyone remember when we used to see cattle grazing where West Ridge is now?

In addition to cattle ranching, the Ranch is used for other purposes too. Both petroleum and natural gas are extracted in Newhall Ranch (the equipment above has to do with natural gas production I'm told). These wells will be capped off eventually as homes are built (interestingly enough, one of the plans to deal with excess chloride in the Santa Clara River involved dumping chloride down these wells)

This home is still used by cowboys and ranchers. It was built in 1945 for Barnsdall Oil Company, according to SCVHistory.com





I think Newhall bought the Rancho San Francisquito from the creditors of the Del Valle family after the ten year western states drought in the 1880′s (pretty much ruined some incredible percentage of cattle ranchers). Leon Worden?
Great pictures, Jeff! Wish I could go on a tour like this.
Great photos!
As for the development, my feelings, too, are conflicted. Part of me hates the idea of building up Newhall Ranch, but the other part of me just loathes it.
Great post and nice, balanced view. Puts Bossert’s snow job to shame.
“Several hundred feet” is not enough for wildlife, nor homeowners that start laying out poison to protect their pets or precious English gardens.
Some Bridgeport homes, particularly at the eastern end, are almost in spitting distance from the river.
Lets at least hope the development isn’t nearly as aesthetically hideous as Bridgeport. Faux lighthouse meets crammed in housing? No bueno.
http://www.scvleon.com/newhall/ruth497.htm
Serious question Jeff. Did you see any citrus orchards in the Los Angeles County portion of Newhall Ranch?
Coastal:
As I work in Santa Barbara for a while I’ve become very familiar with the 126 corridor from the SCV to Ventura. I can’t think of any citrus orchards that I’ve seen this side of the LA county line on my daily commute. The citrus orchards don’t really happen until you get out towards Piru. I’ll keep my eye out on future commutes to see if there are indeed some on the LA county side.
I headed out to Ventura yesterday, and made a note to check the county line… there are no citrus orchards that I could see (unless they’re hidden up a valley somewhere) on the LA County side of the valley.
Excellent posting Jeff and John. The photos are great. The ones with the cattle look more like a painting from 100 years ago.
Whether we like it or not it appears development here will be inevitable. The positive side of this recession is that it is putting the development off for a while. The bottom line is that the people have to live somewhere and the population will still be growing in California. I’m trusting that they do a responsible development like NL&F has done on the West side of town. That being said, I’m still very concerned on the traffic impact along the 5/14 corridor. Perhaps we’ll develop enough to provide more real jobs on this side of the pass???
Don’t believe the “built as planned” baloney from NLF. The ORIGINAL Valencia had canals, not paseos. It was high-rise, not suburban. The newspaper stories including artist drawings are on the walls at the Signal.
And ask the neighbors of the hospital how closely the “original master plan” is being followed, with the (non-)hospital expansion becoming a reality.
NLF is banking on the ignorance and short memories of the valley to let them get away with these marketing lies.
Very neat. Do you have a Google Maps link? I am not very familiar with that area, even though I grew up in the SCV.
Spineflower…..these high rises on the original plan that show up on the walls of the Signal are from one single Signal front page from the 1960s when Valencia was announced and that was only for the Valencia Town Center. Indeed this concept changed as modern malls became more popular and county planners resisted the idea of high rises in a “rural” area. If you check the original maps and approved tracts, Valencia did indeed end up almost entirely as originally planned — Check the actual original 1965 adopted Master Plan. It is public record.
Where would one be able to view the original Master Plan? This stuff gets confusing, because Valencia was started before Nixon created the EPA and all that, and also twenty years before the City was incorporated, so it’s hard to know who has what.
These are some great photos guys! If you go into Mentryville and hike up the path to the top of Mustard Hill behind Felton School you can get a birds eye view of Potrero Canyon from there (and some really good exercise!).
I have seen the Master Plan which was on display at Newhall Land’s old offices (with the county stamp on it) and is on file at County’s Department of Planning which approved it in 1965.
I remember talking to officials at Newhall Land in 1987 just, before Santa Clarita Cityhood, about the Master Plan. This was right around the time that the Valenica Northbridge tract was breaking ground and this was a major move forward for Newhall Land. They knew what they wanted Valencia to be and were committed to sticking to their plan. Remember, Newhall Land chose to take on this project themselves rather than sell off the land to other developers to maintain control.
This of course was before Lennar, but when they say it was “built as promised” it was.
Pingback: Newhall Ranch: Not Your Parents’ Valencia | SCVTalk.com