Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing

Now under construction!
Trustee
Wallis Annenberg
Chairman, President & CEO
Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy
27571 Agoura Rd, Agoura Hills, CA 91301

The Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing is a public-private partnership of monumental scope that has leveraged the expertise and leadership of dozens of organizations and institutions to protect and restore wildlife habitats in Southern California. The crossing is currently in construction and is expected to be finished in 2026.

In 2015, the National Wildlife Foundation (NWF) and Caltrans proposed a massive corridor across the 101 freeway in Agoura Hills to provide wildlife with a safe place to cross into other habitats. At the time, the proposed plan was expected to take years to fund and even longer to build. Due to the bridge’s size and cost, its completion would be reliant on donations from the public.

In 2016, Wallis Annenberg and the Annenberg Foundation took up the call for funds and made a $1 million challenge grant to spur the community and local leaders to donate. The grant provided the necessary test assessments by Caltrans to ensure that the bridge would not cause any environmental impact to the surrounding area.

Thanks to the Annenberg Foundation’s challenge grant, the project received donations from more than 3,000 private, philanthropic, and corporate institutions around the world and helped NWF raise enough money to begin construction – initially in the year 2025.

There’s a reason I wanted to support this crossing and issue this challenge: We need to move beyond mere conservation, toward a kind of environmental rejuvenation. Wildlife crossings are powerfully effective at doing just that — restoring ecosystems that have been fractured and disrupted. It's a way of saying, there are solutions to our deepest ecological challenges, and this is the kind of fresh new thinking that will get us there.

Wallis Annenberg

Wallis Annenberg
California Governor Gavin Newsom

In 2021, Wallis Annenberg and The Annenberg Foundation accelerated donations with a record breaking $25 million challenge grant to the NWF. The ‘Conservation Challenge Grant’ – currently the largest of its kind – serves as a call to philanthropists to help protect a threatened global biodiversity hotspot in Los Angeles. The funds raised were not only enough to fund construction, but moved up the construction timeline to April 22, 2022 – three years earlier than planned.

Construction is now on its way and when built, the Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing will be the largest wildlife corridor in the world and will restore habitats and an ecosystem that over time has been degraded by human development. The bridge will allow for wildlife to cross freely over the 101 freeway without the threat of death or accidents, and will ensure the survival of many isolated species.

Get the latest updates on the construction of the Annenberg Wildlife Crossing →

Time is running out for these mountain lions, and the National Wildlife Federation is so grateful to the Annenberg Foundation for showing extraordinary leadership to help make this crossing a reality.

Beth Pratt

California Regional Executive Director, National Wildlife Federation

Core partners include Caltrans, the National Park Service, the Santa Monica Mountains Conservancy/Mountains Recreation and Conservation Authority, Resource Conservation District of the Santa Monica Mountains, and the National Wildlife Federation.

Living Habitats LLC, a frequent Caltrans collaborator, will coordinate with a broad team of wildlife crossing experts in the planning and design development of the wildlife crossing.

Wallis Annenberg’s grant will protect this global biodiversity hotspot — recognized as one of only 36 biodiversity hotspots worldwide — and ensure that California’s iconic mountain lions and other wildlife can find the food and mates they need to survive by reconnecting the Santa Monica Mountains and the Simi Hills and beyond.

Collin O’Mara

President and CEO, National Wildlife Federation
The project broke ground on Earth Day, 2022.

Related News

wildlife1
Conservation|

“California Wildlife Reconnected” Campaign to Reconnect Wildlife and Protect Biodiversity 

girder4
Conservation|

Annenberg Wildlife Crossing Reaches Major Milestone with First Girder Placement

LEGO_sq
Conservation|

Designers Create LEGO Model of Annenberg Wildlife Crossing

crossingtour_sq1
Conservation|

Wallis Annenberg Wildlife Crossing Tours Make Headlines

Fund1
Conservation|

Annenberg Foundation Offers a Conservation Challenge Grant for New Wildlife Crossing Fund