(CLAIR | Simi Valley, CA) — Simi Valley is getting old and we’re running out of children. Classrooms that once overflowed are thinning out. Sports teams that used to cut players now scramble to fill rosters. Each year, school enrollment shrinks, and with it, the lifeblood of the community. A city without young people doesn’t just get quieter — it gets older, slower, and less alive. Without teens and young families, Simi Valley risks becoming a place where schools close, businesses fade, and the future slips away.
This isn’t just about numbers. It’s about what kind of community Simi Valley wants to be. A town full of families, laughter, and opportunity — or a place that quietly fades into retirement, where parks sit empty and schools become surplus property. Once youth culture disappears, it’s almost impossible to bring back.
The truth is simple: teens are the heartbeat of a community. When they are engaged, curious, and proud of where they live, they create momentum. They pull their friends in. They convince their parents to stay. Later, they come back to raise their own kids. If teens are bored, disconnected, or heading elsewhere every weekend, the city loses them — and it loses the next generation of families too.
Right now, there’s a tension. Gen X parents, raising teens of their own, are open to bold new ideas. They want safe places for their kids to hang out, ways for them to be independent, and reasons to stay in Simi instead of leaving every Friday night. But baby boomers, who still hold much of the political power in Simi Valley, hesitate. They worry about traffic, noise, and change. What they don’t see is that saying “no” to youth is actually saying “no” to Simi’s future.
If Simi Valley wants to thrive — not just survive — it must reinvent itself as a place where teens and young adults want to be. That shift won’t just entertain kids. It will rebuild the foundation of the city: schools that stay open, businesses that stay strong, and neighborhoods that stay alive with young families.
The good news? This isn’t just possible — it’s within reach. By reimagining itself in a bold, out-of-the-box thinking kind of way, Simi could become a magnet for energy, creativity, and youth culture. Here’s how.

1) Year-Round Teen Festivals: A City That Never Feels Boring
Simi Valley could flip the script on suburban quiet by creating a festival rhythm every weekend.
- Friday Night Jams: outdoor concerts, DJ sets, dance battles, silent discos.
- Saturday Makers Market: teens sell vintage clothes, digital art, sneakers, jewelry, or food.
- Sunday Chill Sessions: outdoor movies, park yoga, gaming tournaments projected on big screens.
Other cities do festivals once or twice a year. Simi could do them every week. Imagine the draw if every teenager from Thousand Oaks, Moorpark, and Chatsworth knew they could count on Simi for something fresh on Friday night.
Think Austin’s music culture — but teen-centered, suburban, and built into the calendar.

2) Simi Adventure Parks: Outdoor Energy, All Night Long
Simi already has the landscape — the Santa Susana Mountains, open space preserves, and BMX/skate culture. The next step is going big.
- Mega Skate and BMX Parks with bowls, ramps, and rails designed for competitions.
- LED-Lit Night Trails so teens can hike or bike safely until curfew.
- Urban Obstacle Parks with climbing walls, rope courses, and zip lines built into public plazas.
As part of the mall expansion, imagine a gravity park that combines skateboarding, mountain biking, and climbing into one massive complex.
Think Denver’s outdoor sports culture mixed with Tokyo’s neon-lit parks.

3) Safe Late-Night Options: Making the City Come Alive After Dark
Right now, most of Simi closes early. Teens either stay home or drive out of town. A better option: safe, late-night spaces designed for them.
- Recreation centers open until curfew (or later) with basketball, volleyball, and dance studios.
- E-sports marathons, board game nights, and movie binges running all night.
- Drop-in wellness pods with counselors and quiet zones — casual, not clinical.
This solves two problems at once: keeping teens entertained and giving parents peace of mind.
Think Seoul, South Korea — a city where youth-friendly spaces buzz until dawn.

4) A “Teen Zone” Downtown Strip: A Reimagined Town Center
Simi Valley Town Center has struggled for years. What if it became the region’s only teen-focused downtown?
- E-sports lounges and VR arenas.
- Thrift shops, sneaker boutiques, and boba cafés.
- Street stages for live music, dance crews, and stand-up comedy.
This would turn Simi’s mall into a youth-powered hub, pulling teens from across Ventura County who want a place that feels like theirs.
Think Santa Monica Promenade — but curated for Gen Alpha.

5) A Teen Creator Hub: Where Ideas Become Content
Gen Alpha is the creator generation. They’re building YouTube channels, TikTok edits, and Spotify tracks from their bedrooms. Imagine if Simi gave them professional-level spaces.
- Podcast and film studios for teens to rent at little or no cost.
- Music production labs with recording booths and mixing software.
- Mentorship workshops with Moorpark College, local filmmakers, and media pros.
This would make Simi Valley a youth media capital, a place where creators get their start before going national.
Think Los Angeles’ YouTube Space — but accessible to teens every day.

6) A Teen Transit Pass and Mobility Network: Freedom to Explore
Transportation is a teenager’s biggest barrier. Parents don’t want to drive every weekend, and rideshare costs add up. The fix? A Teen Freedom Pass that runs late to make sure everyone gets home safely.
- Free bus, shuttle, or e-bike rides for anyone under 21.
- Transit hubs that double as hangout lounges with charging stations, Wi-Fi, and snack kiosks.
- A weekend “loop line” connecting schools, the mall, parks, and downtown.
With free, reliable movement, teens could own their weekends without relying on parents.
Think Vienna, Austria — where young people ride the city for free.

7) Skills + Fun Hybrid Spaces: Life Labs That Don’t Feel Like School
Learning doesn’t have to feel like homework. Simi could pioneer Life Labs — teen-friendly skill zones that mix education with excitement.
- Makerspaces with robotics labs, 3D printers, and woodworking.
- Cooking arenas where teens compete Iron Chef-style.
- Auto garages where young adults learn car repair basics.
Instead of lectures, these would run like competitions, challenges, and workshops. Teens would leave with real skills — and have fun doing it.
Think Germany’s apprenticeship system meets an after-school arcade.

8) Digital + Real World Integration: A City App for Gen Alpha
Teens live on their phones. Simi could meet them there with a Teen App that connects the digital and physical worlds.
- A live calendar of concerts, tournaments, and festivals.
- Gamified points system — teens earn rewards for attending events, volunteering, or creating content.
- Safe social media tie-ins like Discord servers and TikTok collabs, city-sponsored but teen-run.
This turns the city itself into a kind of real-life video game, with teens unlocking perks by being active citizens.
Think Pokémon Go — but instead of hunting creatures, you’re unlocking your city.

9) A Teen-Centered Identity: Simi as the Teen Adventure Capital
The boldest move of all would be for Simi Valley to own this identity outright.
- Annual Teen Summit & Festival with bands, esports teams, and influencers.
- Regional branding that positions Simi as the place for youth culture between L.A. and Ventura.
- Partnerships with businesses, nonprofits, and schools to fund and sustain the movement.
This isn’t just about entertainment. It’s about giving Simi Valley a new story — a city known not just for safe neighborhoods, but for being where young people thrive.
Think Austin, Texas — a city that leaned into music until it became its global identity.
The Big Picture
Simi Valley doesn’t have to stay a bedroom community. With the right vision, it could become a city where every teen has something exciting to do every night and every weekend.
By building on its safety, size, and central location, Simi could turn into a magnet for youth culture — a place where teens not only live, but lead.

I recently moved to Simi Valley in April of 2025 and that was the first thing I noticed was there wasn’t much for kids and teens to do. I think these are all great ideas ! I’m not a teen anymore but that sounds like a great childhood. Let’s give the kids the childhood we always wanted and look out for our future. Maybe even throw in an Arcade
The Game Exchange has an Old Style 80’s vibe quarter arcade.
https://maps.app.goo.gl/VZJMR8GxFvzGnRYF7
1555 Simi Town Center Way #160, Simi Valley, CA 93065
I like the way you think! I am a scouting adult for a local scout troop. We already have groups of kids and adults who work with them. I think your ideas and our scouting activities are a match made in heaven.
This sounds great. Another great idea would be to turn the old Macy’s near the food court into a marketplace where we could have lots of small food, wine. beer and ice cream places or small local vendors that could open out onto a green space by turning the parking lot into a fenced in grass area. With outdoor games like corn hole and place for live music. This would make for a great place for families to hang out and give everyone a little something they want.
If the idea is to cater to the undr 21 crowd, skip the alcohol!!!