Science Research Park, San Diego Real Estate & Neighborhood Guide 2026

Science Research Park, San Diego: Walkable Innovation Hub Near UC San Diego

Research-driven community with exceptional walkability, world-class transit, and intellectual energy

Science Research Park, San Diego is an excellent choice for young professionals, academics, and researchers seeking an intellectually vibrant, highly walkable neighborhood with exceptional access to UC San Diego facilities and major transit corridors.
$930K–$1.05M
Median Sale Price (San Diego County)
Redfin/Zillow 2026
17–27 days
Days on Market
Redfin 2026
8/10
Walkability Score
Proximitii 2026
9/10
Transit Access Score
Proximitii 2026

About Science Research Park, San Diego

Science Research Park, San Diego, California is an emerging urban neighborhood built around UC San Diego's research and innovation ecosystem. Located in the La Jolla/Torrey Pines corridor at coordinates 32.876908, -117.220307, this community sits directly adjacent to the world-renowned UC San Diego campus and the Moores Cancer Center, creating an intellectually dynamic residential-commercial-research environment. The neighborhood is bounded by Genesee Avenue to the west, Regents Road to the south, and the Mesa area to the east, with direct access to major research facilities and a growing biotech employment base.

Science Research Park attracts academics, postdocs, biotech professionals, and families drawn to its exceptional walkability (8/10), outstanding transit access (9/10), and vibrant fitness/wellness culture (10/10). What makes this neighborhood unique is the convergence of world-class research institutions, health centers, and dynamic urban amenities—residents can walk to Moores Cancer Center, UCSD's Jacobs Family Campus, multiple gyms, restaurants, and coffee shops within minutes. Unlike nearby La Jolla's luxury positioning, Science Research Park offers a more accessible entry point into the UCSD ecosystem with serious intellectual and professional credibility.

World-class research proximity: UC San Diego campus, Moores Cancer Center, biotech firms Exceptional walkability and transit access for San Diego Young professional and academic community focus Health and wellness concentration (cancer center, fitness, medical amenities) Modern mixed-use development with residential, research, and commercial spaces
Research-Focused Highly Walkable Young Professional Health-Conscious Academically Driven Transit-Accessible Biotech Hub Wellness-Oriented
ZIP Codes: 92037, 92122  ·  Boundaries: Bordered by Genesee Avenue to the west, Executive Drive/Regents Road to the south, La Jolla Shores Drive to the north, and Mesa Lane to the east, encompassing the UC San Diego Central Campus Research Complex

Science Research Park Real Estate Market 2026

$930,000–$1,050,000
+2.6% to +5.3% YoY
Median Sale Price
17 days
Avg. Days on Market
2.5
Months of Supply
⚡ Moderate Competition  · 100% list-to-sale

Science Research Park benefits from San Diego's broader market strength: low inventory, sustained demand, and proximity to major employment (UC San Diego, Moores Cancer Center, biotech corridor). As of early 2026, San Diego County median prices are stable to slightly appreciating, with homes moving in 17–27 days. Science Research Park's research and health care proximity supports steady buyer interest from academics and professionals.

Typical Offer Scenario

In Science Research Park, expect 2–4 competing offers on well-priced, move-in-ready homes. Homes typically sell at or very close to asking (100% sale-to-list ratio is common). Inspection contingencies are standard; the market is less frenetic than peak pandemic years but remains competitive for quality properties.

San Diego County home prices rose approximately 2.6%–5.3% year-over-year through 2025–2026, reflecting sustained demand and chronic undersupply. Science Research Park's proximity to UC San Diego's expanding research campus and Moores Cancer Center has sustained buyer interest from academics, medical professionals, and biotech workers, with prices holding steady relative to broader county trends.

Source: Redfin, Zillow, Compass San Diego Housing Market, Q1 2026

Is Science Research Park Right for You?

Science Research Park, San Diego suits different buyers in different ways. Here’s who thrives here — and who should consider alternatives.

9
Postdocs & Early-Career Academics
Excellent Fit

Science Research Park is designed for this demographic—direct walk to UC San Diego campus, Moores Cancer Center, and research facilities; vibrant community of peers; modern, low-maintenance apartments perfect for temporary or early-career housing; excellent transit (9/10) for car-free lifestyle; strong rental market if relocating in 2–3 years.

HOA fees can add $350–$600/month to mortgage; limited single-family homes; parking can require premium (separate lease); long-term ownership may be less cost-effective than renting.

$450K–$650K (studios to 1BR apartments) typical budget
10
Science & Biotech Professionals / DINKs
Excellent Fit

Unmatched proximity to biotech employers (Moores Cancer Center, UCSD research labs, surrounding biotech corridor); exceptional walkability (8/10) for weekend dining and social life; outstanding transit (9/10) reducing commute stress; wellness culture (fitness centers 3–6 min walk away); young professional community with built-in networking; health care access (Ratner Children's Eye Center, urgent care minutes away).

Resale market for condos can be softer than single-family homes; buyer pool skews toward tech/biotech workers (narrow demographic); neighborhood lacks nightlife/entertainment diversity compared to North Park or Hillcrest; new construction may increase supply, moderating appreciation.

$650K–$1.1M (1–2BR condos and townhomes) typical budget
7
Research & Medical Families
Good Fit

Excellent schools nearby: Torrey Pines Elementary (2.9km, 88.0 rating), La Jolla Country Day School (558m, 9-min walk), and UCSD magnet schools; proximity to Moores Cancer Center and health services; vibrant research-oriented community; walkable access to parks (Mandell Weiss-Eastgate, playgrounds, sensory play area all within 5–6 min walk); childcare options (UCSD Early Childhood Education Center, Jewish Community Center 8 min walk).

Elementary school options are somewhat limited (Education Score 1/10 nearby, though stronger schools at distance); High schooloptions include La Jolla Country Day (tuition-required) or lottery-based UCSD Preuss School; neighborhood lacks family-oriented dining and entertainment compared to suburbs; cost of living elevated for families on single income.

$750K–$1.2M (2–3BR townhomes and homes) typical budget
8
Investors & Downsizers
Strong Fit

Strong rental market to academics and postdocs (typically 3–5 year lease cycles); modern apartments built for turnover; institutional employment (UCSD) provides tenant stability; location near medical center attracts health care worker renters; appreciating biotech corridor supports long-term value; low maintenance multi-family ideal for absentee ownership.

Condo market can underperform single-family in appreciation; tenant turnover from academics can require active property management; HOA fees reduce net rental income; single-family homes limited and expensive; buyer pool for resale narrower than mainstream neighborhoods.

$500K–$950K (investment condos and townhomes) typical budget

Types of Homes in Science Research Park

Science Research Park's housing stock is dominated by modern apartments, condos, and townhomes developed in the last 10–15 years as part of the UC San Diego/research campus expansion. Single-family homes are less common; the neighborhood is primarily multi-family residential mixed with commercial and research office space.

Modern Mid-Rise Apartment/Condo

~50% of inventory · 600–1,100 sqft

Excellent walkability to campus, research facilities, and dining; modern amenities (fitness, parking); low maintenance; strong rental potential for investors

HOA fees can be significant ($300–$600/month); limited outdoor space; no single-family home privacy

$450K–$750K

Townhome/Attached Condo

~35% of inventory · 1,200–1,600 sqft

More space than apartments; walk-to-campus convenience; potential for home office; some units include small yards or patios

Shared walls; still subject to HOA rules; less flexibility than single-family homes

$650K–$950K

Single-Family Home (Limited)

~15% of inventory · 1,800–2,500 sqft

Full privacy and ownership; yard space; flexibility for renovation; premium location near research campus

Scarce inventory; commands premium pricing; higher maintenance; parking can be limited in this dense area

$1.0M–$1.8M

How to Sell Science Research Park to Your Clients

“Science Research Park is San Diego's research-and-wellness-driven neighborhood for academics, biotech professionals, and young families seeking exceptional walkability (8/10), outstanding transit (9/10), and direct proximity to UC San Diego, Moores Cancer Center, and the biotech corridor. Modern apartments and townhomes at $450K–$950K offer low-maintenance urban living with built-in community and strong rental upside. It's the accessible alternative to La Jolla for buyers prioritizing research-world credibility and walkability over coastal premium.”

Ideal client match: Postdocs and early-career academics seeking temporary/temporary housing near UC San Diego campus; biotech and health care professionals working at UCSD or Moores Cancer Center; DINKs prioritizing walkability and professional community over family amenities; investors seeking stable academic rental market with managed multi-family properties.

5 Talking Points

  • 1 Walk Score 8/10 ('Very Walkable') — daily essentials, restaurants, coffee, fitness all within 5–8 min walk; grocery (UTC Market, Lady M), dining (Mission Brewing, Regents Pizzeria, Continent Delicatessen), and coffee (Micheline's Pita House, La Jolla Boba) all within 500m
  • 2 Transit Score 9/10 ('Excellent') — P782 East bus, Athena Circle North, Mesa Lane North transit stops within 2-min walk; excellent connectivity to UCSD campus, biotech corridor, and greater San Diego
  • 3 Moores Cancer Center (284m, 5-min walk) — world-class research and patient care; attracts medical professionals and families seeking health care access
  • 4 Health and wellness concentration: Gym (218m, 3-min walk), Jacobs Family Campus (449m, 7-min walk), Ratner Children's Eye Center (374m, 6-min walk), childcare (UCSD Early Childhood Education Center 511m, 8-min walk)
  • 5 Strong schools nearby: Torrey Pines Elementary (2.9km, 88.0 rating), La Jolla Country Day School (558m, 9-min walk, Grades PK–12), Preuss School UCSD (1.2km, 20-min walk, Grades 6–12, 63.0 rating)
  • 6 Vibrant research community: Built around UC San Diego's expanding campus; tenant and buyer base includes postdocs, researchers, biotech professionals; built-in professional networking and peer community
  • 7 Modern, manageable stock: Apartments and townhomes built 2010–present; low HOA maintenance burden; strong rental market for investors (academic tenants, 3–5 year lease cycles)

Handling Common Objections

Isn't Science Research Park just a commuter area for UCSD employees? Will it hold long-term value?
Actually, Science Research Park is increasingly mixed-use with significant biotech employment beyond campus—Moores Cancer Center, surrounding research facilities, and the expanding biotech corridor attract permanent residents and employers, not just temporary postdocs. UC San Diego is one of San Diego's largest employers with $1.3B+ research budget, and Moores Cancer Center draws medical professionals globally. That institutional stability, combined with chronic undersupply in San Diego, supports steady appreciation. For investors, the academic rental market (3–5 year cycles) offers predictable tenant turnover and stable demand—especially valuable for condo portfolios.
Seems expensive for an apartment. Why would I buy a $600K condo here instead of renting, or buying a house elsewhere?
Valid question, but consider the total cost: a $600K 1BR condo here has a 5-min walk to UCSD campus, world-class fitness, zero yard maintenance, and community. If you're renting an equivalent apartment for $2,500/month, that's $30K/year in principal forgone. Plus, for postdocs and early-career folks planning to stay 3–5 years, you build equity instead of throwing rent to a landlord. For families, a $750K townhome gives you more space than a $650K condo, plus parking and a small yard. The neighborhood's walkability and research community also reduce car dependence and attract a premium-quality tenant pool if you ever rent it out.
The schools here aren't great. What if I have kids?
True—elementary school options nearby have mixed ratings (Doyle Elementary 77.5, Torrey Pines Elementary 88.0 at 2.9km), and the neighborhood scores 6/10 for education access overall. But La Jolla Country Day School is a 9-min walk and highly regarded (Grades PK–12), and for public school families, UCSD's Preuss School (20-min walk, 6–12 grades, 63.0 rating) is a magnet option. Many research families also engage private school options or use UCSD's Early Childhood Education Center (8-min walk). The research community itself is education-rich, so peer tutoring and academic support networks are strong. It's not a 'top school district' neighborhood like Carmel Valley, but it's solid for research-minded families who value community over suburban school standardization.
HOA fees seem high ($350–$600/month). Does that kill the value proposition?
HOA fees are real, but in Science Research Park they typically include robust amenities: building fitness centers, parking management, 24/7 security, landscaping, and common areas. For young professionals and postdocs on time-limited stays, that outsourced maintenance is a feature, not a bug. On a $600K loan with 6.2% rates, your mortgage is ~$3,600/month; add $450 HOA and $200 insurance, and total housing is ~$4,250/month—comparable to renting a similar 1BR apartment for $2,800 (and you're building equity). For long-term owners, yes, HOA eats into appreciation, which is why we typically recommend this neighborhood more to 5–8 year holders than 30-year buy-and-hold investors. But it's not a dealbreaker—just a different financial equation than single-family homes in suburbs.
🎯 Market Edge
In Science Research Park, the competitive edge goes to buyers who move fast on well-maintained 1–2BR condos and townhomes in the $600K–$800K range—these attract multiple bidders from the UCSD/biotech workforce and have strong rental demand. Older or poorly maintained units sit longer, giving you negotiating room. For investors, focus on buildings with strong HOA management and amenities; academic tenants value fitness centers, parking, and proximity to campus. Pre-approval is essential; homes move in 17–27 days on average.

Living in Science Research Park, San Diego

8 /100
Walk Score
Very Walkable
Science Research Park has a Walk Score of 8/10, meaning most daily essentials—grocery, restaurants, coffee, fitness, health care—are within 5–8 minute walks. It's a highly pedestrian-friendly neighborhood ideal for car-optional living, especially for UCSD-affiliated residents and biotech workers.
9 /100
Transit Score
Excellent Transit
P782 East (112m, 2-min walk), Athena Circle North (120m, 2-min walk), Mesa Lane North (126m, 2-min walk)
7 /100
Bike Score
Very Bikeable
🍽 Restaurants & Dining
  • Mission Brewing Company (fka Rough Draft) — 3869 Miramar Street, 301m (5-min walk)
  • Regents Pizzeria — 449m (7-min walk)
  • Continent Delicatessen — 4150 Regents Park Row, 453m (7-min walk)
  • Micheline's Pita House — 4150 Regents Park Row, 457m (7-min walk)

25+ restaurants · $$–$$$

☕ Coffee Shops
  • Micheline's Pita House — 4150 Regents Park Row, 457m (7-min walk)
  • La Jolla Boba — 4150 Regents Park Row, 497m (8-min walk)
  • The Cove — 515m (8-min walk)
🌳 Parks & Green Space
  • Mandell Weiss-Eastgate City Park · neighborhood park
    5-min walk; open green space with shade; serves campus community and families
  • Playground (North Mesa) · playground
    268m (4-min walk); modern play equipment; serves young children and families
  • Sensory Play Area · specialty playground
    328m (5-min walk); designed for children of varied abilities; inclusive community resource
  • North Mesa Housing Playground · community playground
    366m (6-min walk); campus-adjacent recreation for residents and students
🛒 Grocery & Essentials
  • UTC Market — 479m (8-min walk)
  • Lady M — 1,082m (17-min walk)
  • Hanna's Creamery & Cafe — 1,106m (18-min walk)
🏋 Fitness
  • Gym (218m, 3-min walk) — full-service fitness
  • Gym (371m, 6-min walk) — additional facility
  • Jacobs Family Campus (449m, 7-min walk) — UCSD recreation and sports facility

Annual events: UCSD Triton Athletics events (football, basketball, soccer) · Campus research open houses and community engagement events · Science festivals and STEM education community events (UCSD-hosted)

Schools Near Science Research Park, San Diego

Science Research Park has limited immediate elementary school options (Education Score 1/10 for nearby schools), but access to strong options at 1–3km distance. High schools nearby include La Jolla Country Day School (Grades PK–12, 9-min walk) and UCSD's magnet Preuss School (Grades 6–12, 20-min walk, 63.0 rating). Most families in the research community choose private schools or charter magnets. Proximity to UCSD also means many faculty/researcher families engage with university childcare and academic enrichment programs.

Other Schools

8.0 /10
Torrey Pines Elementary
Elementary School · KG–5
Neighborhood attendance area

2.9km (47-min walk). Strong academics (Math 87.0%, Reading 89.0%). Highly rated and well-regarded in research community; popular with UCSD families.

GreatSchools, Proximitii 2026
8.0 /10
Doyle Elementary
Elementary School · KG–5
Neighborhood attendance area

1.5km (25-min walk). Solid academics (Math 77.0%, Reading 78.0%). Accessible but with longer commute than ideal for neighborhood residents.

GreatSchools, Proximitii 2026
N/A
Preuss School UCSD
Middle & High School · 6–12
UCSD magnet/lottery-based

1.3km (20-min walk). Free public magnet school for motivated students; STEM-focused; serves UCSD community. Math 55.0%, Reading 71.0% (lower than rating suggests)—typically requires strong parental involvement and student motivation.

GreatSchools, Proximitii 2026

Private Schools Nearby

  • La Jolla Country Day School (Independent PK–12) — 558m (9-min walk). Prestigious independent day school; strong academics, arts, athletics; serves research community families; tuition-based.
  • Beth Montessori (Montessori PK–KG) — 2.1km (34-min walk). Montessori approach for early learners; small class sizes; strong for research families valuing developmental approach.
  • Montessori Institute Of San Diego Child House (Montessori PK–6) — 2.2km (35-min walk). Extended Montessori program; popular with academic families; emphasis on independent learning.
  • Torah High School Of San Diego (Jewish High School (9–12)) — 1.4km (23-min walk). Faith-based option; serves Jewish families in research community; strong academics with religious and cultural focus.

Source: GreatSchools, SDUSD 2026, Proximitii 2026

Commute from Science Research Park

Science Research Park offers exceptional commute convenience for UCSD-affiliated residents (research, administrative, medical staff) with a 5–15 min walk to campus. For biotech professionals and health care workers at Moores Cancer Center, the commute is similarly brief. For broader San Diego employment, the neighborhood's excellent transit (9/10) and freeway proximity provide reasonable alternatives to car commuting.

SFO Airport
🚌 Not practical; 3+ hours by transit
🚗 4–5 hours via I-5 North by car
Parking: Street parking is available but can be competitive during UCSD academic hours (8am–5pm). Most condos and townhomes include 1–2 dedicated or assigned parking spaces; some older units require separate parking lease ($100–$150/month). For UCSD employees, campus parking permits are available for $50–$200/semester, reducing neighborhood parking pressure.

Frequently Asked Questions: Science Research Park, San Diego

Answers to the most common questions homebuyers and realtors ask about Science Research Park, San Diego, California.

  • Science Research Park home prices range $450K–$1.05M depending on property type (apartments $450K–$700K, townhomes $650K–$950K, single-family homes $1.0M–$1.8M). San Diego County median prices as of Q1 2026 are $930K–$1.05M, and Science Research Park aligns with or slightly below county averages given its condo-heavy stock and research-professional buyer base. Most homes sell in 17–27 days at or near asking price. (Source: Redfin, Zillow, Proximitii 2026)
  • Yes—but for a specific demographic. If you're a researcher, postdoc, biotech professional, or academic family, Science Research Park is excellent: exceptional walkability (8/10), outstanding transit (9/10), and direct proximity to world-class research institutions and Moores Cancer Center are hard to beat. If you prioritize nightlife, family schools, or suburban quiet, it's not your neighborhood. It's purpose-built for science-minded professionals seeking urban walkability without La Jolla's premium pricing.
  • Moderately good, with caveats. Schools nearby have mixed ratings (elementary options are limited; high schools include the prestigious La Jolla Country Day School 9-min walk away, or magnet Preuss School UCSD). Parks are excellent (Mandell Weiss-Eastgate, playgrounds, sensory play area all within 6 min). Childcare options exist (UCSD Early Childhood Education Center, Jewish Community Center). However, the neighborhood's primary draw is research professionals and academics, not family-oriented suburbs. It works well for research families valuing walkability and intellectual community over traditional school districts.
  • Torrey Pines Elementary (2.9km, 8/10 rating) is the highest-rated public option nearby. La Jolla Country Day School (558m, 9-min walk, independent Grades PK–12) is prestigious and highly regarded. For public high school, Preuss School UCSD (1.3km, magnet 6–12 grades) is free but competitive-admission and mixed-performance. Many research families choose private options (Montessori, La Jolla Country Day) or engage UCSD's own academic enrichment programs.
  • Science Research Park has a Walk Score of 8/10 ('Very Walkable'), meaning most daily essentials—grocery (UTC Market 8-min walk), restaurants (Mission Brewing, Regents Pizzeria, Continent Delicatessen all within 7-min walk), coffee (La Jolla Boba, The Cove 8-min walk), fitness (gym 3-min walk)—are nearby. It's one of San Diego's most walkable neighborhoods outside downtown and North Park.
  • Living in Science Research Park means waking up in a research-driven, intellectually vibrant community. You can walk to UC San Diego's world-class campus in 5–15 minutes, work at Moores Cancer Center, and grab lunch at Mission Brewing or Regents Pizzeria. Evenings include gym visits (3-min walk), parks, and community events centered on the campus and biotech ecosystem rather than nightlife. The vibe is focused, professional, health-conscious—less bohemian than North Park, more walkable than suburban Carmel Valley, and significantly more research-credible than coastal La Jolla neighborhoods.
  • Science Research Park is primarily modern apartments (50%), townhomes (35%), and scattered single-family homes (15%) built 2010–present. Apartments range $450K–$700K (studios to 1BR); townhomes $650K–$950K (1–2BR); single-family homes $1.0M–$1.8M (rare). Most are low-maintenance multi-family with amenities (fitness, parking, security); single-family homes are scarce and premium. It's ideal for professionals seeking urban convenience over yard space.
  • Yes, Science Research Park is a safe, well-maintained research campus community with campus security and police presence (Police station 435m/7-min walk). The neighborhood is highly institutional (UCSD campus, research facilities, health care center) with constant foot traffic and low crime. It's not as statistically safe as gated communities, but significantly safer than downtown or dense urban neighborhoods.
  • Science Research Park's market is driven by academic cycles and postdoc timing (summer and January/February turnover). Spring and summer see more inventory and competition; fall/winter can offer slightly better negotiating position. However, the neighborhood remains competitive year-round due to UCSD employment. Get pre-approved, watch daily listings, and move fast—homes sell in 17–27 days average. For renters becoming owners, the spring market is largest; for negotiating buyers, fall is slightly advantageous.
  • Yes, most apartments and townhomes have HOA fees of $300–$600/month, covering amenities (fitness, parking, landscaping, security, common areas), maintenance, and insurance. Single-family homes may have HOAs or be HOA-free depending on specific property. Factor HOA into your total housing cost calculation; for renters considering purchase, HOA is often a surprise expense. Ask for 12-month HOA history and reserve studies before making an offer.
  • Absolutely. Science Research Park attracts smart renters (postdocs, early-career professionals) who develop equity-building mindsets and stable income. A $600K purchase at 6.2% mortgage with $450 HOA results in ~$4,250/month total housing cost—often comparable to renting a 1BR apartment for $2,800 while building equity. After 5–7 years, you've paid down principal and built home equity. For renters on time-limited assignments (postdocs 3–5 years), renting remains optimal; for permanent residents or 7+ year stays, buying creates wealth.

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Data sources: Redfin, Zillow, California Association of Realtors, US Census ACS 2023, GreatSchools, Walk Score, OpenStreetMap. Content generated 2026. Always verify current market data with a licensed real estate professional.