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  #1  
Old Posted May 17, 2007, 5:40 AM
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SAN FRANCISCO | Hunter's Point

Quote:
Hunters Point plan given the go-ahead

The Board of Supervisors voted in favor of plans for a Hunters Point stadium.
Joshua Sabatini, The Examiner
2007-05-16 10:00:00.0

SAN FRANCISCO -
An ambitious plan to redevelop Candlestick Point, the former Hunters Point Naval Shipyard, and build a new San Francisco 49ers football stadium was embraced Tuesday by the Board of Supervisors.

In a 9-2 vote, the Board of Supervisors approved a resolution allowing The City to proceed with planning for the major project and authorizing an environmental study of it.

The project includes 6,500 units of housing at Candlestick Point, 2,000 units of housing at the Hunters Point Shipyard site, retail and office space, parks and a new stadium for the San Francisco 49ers at the Hunters Point Shipyard site.

Tuesday’s board vote shows that Mayor Gavin Newsom and the Board of Supervisors are “very much on the same page,” said Michael Cohen, of the Mayor’s Office of Economic and Workforce Development, which is overseeing the project.

Cohen said development would move forward even if the 49ers decide to move to Santa Clara, but that the plan “happens to be our best chance to keep the 49ers in San Francisco.”

The City and lead project developer Lennar BVHP are eyeing summer 2009 for final plans since the project includes a new stadium for the 49ers, who have said they want a new stadium by 2012.

The 49ers are in talks with Santa Clara about building a stadium there, but continue to negotiate with San Francisco officials. The City abandoned an initial proposal to build the stadium at Candlestick Point, after the 49ers criticized that plan because of concerns of stadium parking and traffic.

Supervisors Chris Daly and Ed Jew voted against the resolution.

“This is the most enormous redevelopment project ever undertaken by The City,” Jew said. “I am not convinced that diverting property tax from an area this large to the redevelopment agency makes sense.”

He also said The City should not “ignore” the 30,000 residents who signed a petition “to put this plan on the ballot.”

Daly said community involvement has been lacking, although he said it has improved lately.

Brian O’Flynn, who organized last year’s referendum campaign against the Bayview-Hunters Point Redevelopment plan, has argued that no project should proceed until voters weigh in on the overall redevelopment plan for that area.

The signed petition to put the redevelopment plan on the ballot was deemed invalid last year by the city attorney because the plan was not attached to the petition. Advocates of the referendum have filed a lawsuit against this decision.

Source: http://www.examiner.com/printa-73079..._go-ahead.html
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Old Posted May 17, 2007, 5:57 AM
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Here's an earlier but more detailed Chronicle artyicle on the project:

Quote:
City unveils new 49ers stadium proposal
Grand plans would aim to reinvigorate Hunters Point, Candlestick areas

Patrick Hoge, Chronicle Staff Writer
Monday, March 26, 2007

(03-26) 22:01 PDT SAN FRANCISCO -- The neglected areas of San Francisco's southeast shore would be remade into a destination spot with a new football stadium, hundreds of acres of open space and thousands of new homes under an ambitious city proposal that rivals plans for Treasure Island and Mission Bay.

Mayor Gavin Newsom says his plan for the 790-acre site would not require public funding for a stadium at the Hunters Point Naval Shipyard, a toxic site that the Navy is cleaning up. The plan also calls for a new look for Candlestick Point, where the 49ers' current stadium would be bulldozed to make way for high-rise homes, retail shops and parks.

The plan, unveiled Monday night, makes other far-reaching promises, such as plentiful parking for tailgate parties, no seizures of privately owned homes, possible rebuilding of a troubled housing project and, ultimately, the chance for city voters to bless the final vision.

"We have a plan that we can finance -- no surprises,'' Newsom said in an interview. "I want to put pressure on the 49ers. I want to make it very difficult for them to leave our city,'' Newsom said.

The team is working on a plan to build a stadium in Santa Clara and is trying to raise public support for partial public financing. A detailed financing plan for that project is expected next month.

But Newsom is betting that the 49ers will not get what they are seeking in the South Bay. He said he plans to ask the Board of Supervisors to endorse his plan in May, and environmental reviews could start in June. Construction could begin in June 2009, and the stadium could be ready by the 2012 season, he said.

City officials insist that the transformation of the troubled neighborhoods will happen regardless of whether the team builds its new home in San Francisco.

The city's plan embraces financing tactics that have worked in San Francisco before. Its partner is the Lennar Corp. of Miami, a Fortune 500 company that is leading redevelopment efforts at former military bases on Treasure Island and Mare Island in Vallejo.

As it did for the San Francisco Giants' waterfront ballpark, the city would contribute the land. Lennar says it would contribute $100 million in cash and help finance the stadium's infrastructure, including parking, roads, electrical lines, sewer pipes and water service.

The 49ers apparently don't have anything like that in Santa Clara, and the team says the city will have to make some sort of "up-front public investment,'' possibly in the form of land or access to the city's utility funds. One source involved with the deal said the team wants between $150 million and $200 million.

Team spokeswoman Lisa Lang said San Francisco's latest proposal represents progress but doesn't address all the team's concerns. That includes the cleanup of the Hunters Point Superfund site, designated as one of the country's most polluted areas.

"We are still in the midst of working through the issues associated with the cleanup time frame of the Superfund site, the public transportation plan, the infrastructure issues and the traffic plans, and these are not yet resolved,'' she said. "But we are making progress and working through these issues with the city and Lennar."

In November, 49ers owners John York and Denise DeBartolo York announced that Santa Clara had become their favored stadium site, abandoning a Candlestick proposal that city officials hoped could also support the 2016 Olympic Games. San Francisco's plan, the Yorks said, would feel cramped with the high-rise housing development, and a proposed multilevel parking garage would ruin the fans' tailgate traditions.

They also questioned whether Lennar Corp. would construct needed infrastructure improvements in a timely manner.

Newsom and Lennar's new plan provides open-air parking for 19,500 cars immediately around the stadium. The parking surface would be made of "dual use turf'' -- natural grass held together with a synthetic mesh in the root system, allowing the space to be used for recreation year-round.

The plan also includes at least 8,500 housing units, 2 million square feet of office space, an 8,000- to 12,000-seat arena and 700,000 square feet of retail and entertainment uses, including a large grocery store near Highway 101 at Candlestick and a smaller one at Hunters Point.

There would more than 350 acres of parks and open space, including the stadium parking and a waterfront trail.

Newsom said the plan would need the support of Bayview-Hunters Point residents, most of whom seemed pleased with the vision at a Monday evening meeting of citizens involved with the long-discussed redevelopment of both Hunters Point and Candlestick Point. To that end, Lennar's plans call for replacement housing for artists who have been living at the former shipyard.

There would also be an International African Marketplace, replacement housing for residents of the city's 45-year-old Alice Griffith Housing Development and even a cable-guided tram that would climb the steep hill that dominates Bayview Park, one of the city's least-used parks.

Lennar representatives said their project will be financed with private money, funds borrowed against future property taxes and assessments and fees typical of new development. They expect the project to be finished by 2021.

The 49ers are skeptical that the cleanup of the 500-acre former shipyard can be done expeditiously.

But Navy and Environmental Protection Agency officials say that much of the hardest work has already been done, and top Navy brass committed this month to trying to meet the city's schedule for a phased transfer of the shipyard, with the 27-acre parcel for the stadium conveyed first, by the summer of 2009, to allow for stadium construction.

The key issue is whether Congress will maintain the same level of annual funding for the cleanup of Hunters Point -- about $70 million. The answer to that question will not come until this fall, but the city has U.S. Sens. Dianne Feinstein and Barbara Boxer as well as House Speaker Nancy Pelosi on its side.

The 49ers also have questioned whether fans will get to and from a Hunters Point stadium quickly. Santa Clara boasts that it has four- to eight-lane roads serving the potential stadium site, between Great America amusement park and the city's convention center near the nexus of highways 101 and 237 and Interstate 880.

Lennar's traffic engineers believe the "dump time'' for getting cars out of a Hunters Point site would be less than what fans currently experience at Monster Park and would be comparable to what fans would experience in Santa Clara. They reason that traffic would travel on several routes. Northbound traffic, for example, would go through industrial neighborhoods. The company has not provided any traffic studies. The city's plan also calls for mass transit, including buses and possibly water taxis or ferries.

The 49ers have not made a formal proposal to Santa Clara yet. Last week, however, 49ers officials were openly coordinating with former Santa Clara city staff members and elected officials who publicly called on the city to study using some of city-owned Silicon Valley Power's money for a stadium project.

One advocate for studying that approach was former city manager and councilman Don Von Raesfeld, for whom the city recently named its new power plant. Team officials told him they need a public investment of somewhere between $150 million and $200 million, he said.

John Roukema, assistant director of Silicon Valley Power, said that drawing down the utility's reserve funds could lead to an increase in electricity rates, which are among the lowest in the state.

Roukema said that as of January, the utility's cash and investments totaled $387 million. And of that, nearly $169 million is committed to specific projects or needed to pay down bonds. The remaining $241 million, he said, is needed for capital improvements and insurance against electricity market volatility.

"The fact is that this money is still used to allow us to provide competitively priced electricity,'' Roukema said. "It's certainly not a windfall here.''

Von Raesfeld said he did not think a citywide vote would be required if the city chose to invest utility funds directly into the stadium.

Santa Clara's city attorney in 2001, however, opined that voters would have to change the city charter to tap utility funds to help fund a baseball stadium for the Oakland Athletics. That effort, led by local citizens including Von Raesfeld, withered away without a vote after years of work.

In 1990, the San Francisco Giants also went to voters in Santa Clara, San Jose, Sunnyvale and Milpitas seeking approval of a 1 percent electricity tax to pay for a stadium. The measure was soundly rejected.

E-mail Patrick Hoge at phoge@sfchronicle.com.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cg...G3UOS7BF11.DTL

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Old Posted May 17, 2007, 5:09 PM
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This looks like an awesome plan. Why so much opposition to it? I hope this happens.
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Old Posted May 17, 2007, 5:27 PM
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^^^Why the opposition? In San Francisco, that's often hard to say. One thing to keep in mind is that the Giants have already announced they want to move to Santa Clara so this is a little late. It could probably be redesigned without the stadium if the city gives up--they haven't given up yet because nobody's sure Santa Clara will be any more cooperative with the Giants than SF has been so far--but then gthere's the simple fact that in San Francisco every Supervisor and every resident has an idea what should be done and how it should be done and they try to insist on things being done "their way". Finally, there's politics and that's probably mpore complicated than you want to know. Suffice it to say that this is SF's last remaining large black majority neighborhood and African-Americans in SF don't have a reassuring history with "redevelopment".

I'm sure other San Franciscans will have ideas about it if they noticed this thread.
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Old Posted May 17, 2007, 5:46 PM
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Originally Posted by BTinSF View Post
^^^Why the opposition? In San Francisco, that's often hard to say. One thing to keep in mind is that the Giants have already announced they want to move to Santa Clara so this is a little late. It could probably be redesigned without the stadium if the city gives up--they haven't given up yet because nobody's sure Santa Clara will be any more cooperative with the Giants than SF has been so far--but then gthere's the simple fact that in San Francisco every Supervisor and every resident has an idea what should be done and how it should be done and they try to insist on things being done "their way". Finally, there's politics and that's probably mpore complicated than you want to know. Suffice it to say that this is SF's last remaining large black majority neighborhood and African-Americans in SF don't have a reassuring history with "redevelopment".

I'm sure other San Franciscans will have ideas about it if they noticed this thread.
you mean 49ers right I'm sure the Giants are happy with AT&T Park
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  #6  
Old Posted May 17, 2007, 5:48 PM
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you mean 49ers right I'm sure the Giants are happy with AT&T Park
Yeah, sorry. I'm in a "New York state of mind" today.
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Old Posted May 17, 2007, 6:29 PM
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Well, for this one, I actually can't blame the supervisors, although Chris Daly continues to be a lame duck supervisor that halts all improvements in the city. The scary thing is that I was viewing beyondchron the other day (yeah, I know its biased) and they're discussing him doing a grass-roots campaign to win against Newsom in the next election. If that happened, I'd move out of the city. But I digress.

On another note, is anyone else as upset with John York as I am? I'm a die-hard 49ers fan and loved the way the team was run when Eddie D. was the owner. He's really upsetting me that he's being a little whiny baby and thinks its ok to move the site to Santa Clara, rather than working with the city. Sure a lot of fans live down there, but it just doesn't have the same aura or feel to it being way down in Santa Clara (or Los Angeles north). Sure, it may make business sense, but he'll still make a large profit by having it in the city. I wish they would have an owner that actually cared about the team and the illustrious history of having them in the city, rather than simply looking for business profits. Also, his "ambassador" Lisa Lang is nothing more than a puppet and really needs to get a backbone, rather than giving the owner special favors to get to the top.
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Old Posted Jun 20, 2007, 5:16 AM
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krudmonk, lose the gratuitous insults and personal attacks.
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Old Posted Jun 20, 2007, 5:37 AM
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krudmonk, lose the gratuitous insults and personal attacks.
Other than "snob," what have I done wrong? Disagree with people?
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Seattle/Tacoma
Really? I thought Portland was in that role.
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Old Posted Jun 20, 2007, 10:03 AM
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Other than "snob,"
Don't do that.
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Old Posted Jun 20, 2007, 5:23 PM
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Quote:
Grandkids: Get ready for 49ers' stadium
Scott Ostler
Wednesday, June 20, 2007

It will be nothing more, really, than a bunch of plastic seats bolted to an oval hunk of concrete poured around a rectangle of grass. But by the time the 49ers' new stadium is built, the project will make the planning and building of the Golden Gate Bridge look like an Amish barn-raising.

The bridge took 16 years from proposal to opening. The stadium project is going on a decade and the 49ers are at Step 1: Gleam in eye.

The slow and painfully awkward dance continued this week when three NFL representatives came to the Bay Area to tour the two sites voted Most Likely to Land the 49ers.

On Monday, they visited Hunters Point in San Francisco and Tuesday, they toured the area next to the Great America theme park in Santa Clara. The NFL people seemed pleased with both visits, and why not? Who wouldn't be dazzled by a VIP tour of a toxic-waste dump and an empty parking lot?

The NFL drop-in inspection isn't likely to affect much. The league has site input only in terms of influence it could exert on the 49ers when they come asking for a stadium loan.

The ball remains in the 49ers' court and they haven't figured out yet whether it's a tennis ball or a golf ball, or what they should use to whack it.

Fans to 49ers: Shut up and build. Somewhere.

Fans merely want a place to sit. Once you're seated on Grand-Opening Sunday, whether it's in Santa Clara, San Francisco or Stinson Beach, you'll be in the cozy confines of Corporate Name Stadium sipping a $17 beer and cheering touchdown passes thrown by Steve Young's grandson.

The NFL inspection team didn't indicate which site it favors, and we might never know, because so much of this stadium business is conducted in secret, driven by unknown agenda $.

The NFL trio reportedly was impressed with the Hunters Point site, not only by the amount of work the city has done, on paper and on the land, but with the scenic views. The three were impressed with the Santa Clara site's access to public transportation.

For what it might be worth, John York and his son Jed of the team's ruling family helped conduct the tour in Santa Clara but didn't make the tour at Hunters Point.

Santa Clara is still the Yorks' No. 1 choice, though much has changed since November when the 49ers announced they were abandoning most hope of a San Francisco stadium and that Santa Clara was their future home.

Stuff keeps happening. The company that owns Great America, Cedar Fair, recently expressed its opposition to a stadium in its parking lot. The 49ers say they easily and gladly would deal with Cedar's concerns, but that Cedar hasn't replied to 49ers e-mails for three months.

You might think if a company was threatening to block your new stadium and wasn't returning your e-mails, you would try a more advanced form of communication, like, I don't know, the telephone.

Meanwhile, communications remain open between the 49ers and San Francisco.

The city has two master plans for the 775 acres at Hunters Point. Plan A includes a football stadium with extensive grassy parking areas, and about $100 million worth of cash and goodies to help the 49ers build their home. Plan B is sans football.

The 49ers are asking Santa Clara for about $160 million, in addition to the land for the stadium, and that's no sure thing, especially now that Cedar is putting up a roadblock.

San Francisco officials say the massive development project at Hunters Point isn't a hope or a dream, it's a solid plan that's already in motion, and the 49ers could start building there in 2009.

Or they could drag their feet and, a couple years from now, wave as that train leaves the station.

The stadium gets fuzzier and fuzzier, and officials in Santa Clara and San Francisco probably are starting to wonder if the 49ers ever had a clue or plan, other than to figure out where they could shake the most fruit from the tree.

The 49ers say their main concern is for the game-day experience for their fans. They bailed on a Candlestick Park site partly because of concern over tailgating ambience. Now San Francisco is promising vast grassy pastures for parking/tailgating, overlooking the bay, in contrast to Santa Clara's asphalt prairie in the shadows of roller coasters.

The slow, awkward dance continues.

Fortunately, it's only a football stadium. If the 49ers had been in charge of building the Golden Gate Bridge, they'd still be listening to overtures from Livermore.

E-mail Scott Ostler at sostler@sfchronicle.com.
http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cg...PG3AQI9LO1.DTL
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Old Posted Aug 22, 2007, 3:26 PM
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I hope this is the correct way to post anothers picture.

From wade2tall at flickr.com

http://www.flickr.com/photo_zoom.gne...908@N01&size=l


Just thought this picture gave a great overview of the development opportunity San Francisco has along its eastern shore. I am going to post some information I have on the large Brisbane brownfield later on in the Bay Area development thread.
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Old Posted Aug 23, 2007, 1:33 AM
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Now that is what I call prime real estate
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Old Posted Aug 23, 2007, 3:17 AM
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^^^Not so prime. Since WW II it has been a Navy shipyard and is burdoned by all the toxics that suggests. Even demolishing the existing structures is nightmarish given the asbestos and so on that they contain but the soil is also heavily contaminated.
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Old Posted Aug 23, 2007, 4:28 AM
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Even if redeveloped, there's still gonna be that giant mass of housing projects right in the middle of everything. Are there any plans for rebuilding them? Most are in horrrrrrrrrible condition. Something along the lines of Valencia Gardens, or Army and Harrison would be nice...

Although in the past it seems they've just torn them out, and left it at that. You can still see the outlines on the bare hillside on the south-easternmost side of the hill, where a bunch of them used to stand.


Also, I always wondered what the City's plan was, having a state-of-the-art stadium and new neighborhood, right next to the most concentrated pocket of poverty in SF...and the geography means that you would pretty much have to go right by the projects to get in or out. Can you imagine the potential robbery-fest this would present to certain unsavory individuals? You spend your life living in the most neglected and violent neighborhood in SF, and suddenly everyone is coming right to your doorstep. If you're one of those residents who makes a living off crime, you're going to have a good time. What was SF's plan, if an Olympic Village were to be built here? The world would get a glimpse at the ugly truth of SF's poor population......how was the city planning to hide all this?

Even with gentrification, the projects will still be there. It'll become more like the western addition I guess... Projects surrounded by relative wealth, instead of industrial wasteland...

And I can just see the tension rising. You live in HP, long neglected, and all of a sudden everyone wants to move into your backyard? All of a sudden, you're an outcast in your own neighborhood, even though 5 years before, no one would set foot within a mile of where you lived.

It always seemed a little wierd to me, unless there's something I'm missing...

Last edited by tech12; Aug 23, 2007 at 4:50 AM.
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Old Posted Aug 24, 2007, 9:31 PM
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Originally Posted by tech12 View Post
Even if redeveloped, there's still gonna be that giant mass of housing projects right in the middle of everything. Are there any plans for rebuilding them? Most are in horrrrrrrrrible condition. Something along the lines of Valencia Gardens, or Army and Harrison would be nice...

Although in the past it seems they've just torn them out, and left it at that. You can still see the outlines on the bare hillside on the south-easternmost side of the hill, where a bunch of them used to stand.


Also, I always wondered what the City's plan was, having a state-of-the-art stadium and new neighborhood, right next to the most concentrated pocket of poverty in SF...and the geography means that you would pretty much have to go right by the projects to get in or out. Can you imagine the potential robbery-fest this would present to certain unsavory individuals? You spend your life living in the most neglected and violent neighborhood in SF, and suddenly everyone is coming right to your doorstep. If you're one of those residents who makes a living off crime, you're going to have a good time. What was SF's plan, if an Olympic Village were to be built here? The world would get a glimpse at the ugly truth of SF's poor population......how was the city planning to hide all this?

Even with gentrification, the projects will still be there. It'll become more like the western addition I guess... Projects surrounded by relative wealth, instead of industrial wasteland...

And I can just see the tension rising. You live in HP, long neglected, and all of a sudden everyone wants to move into your backyard? All of a sudden, you're an outcast in your own neighborhood, even though 5 years before, no one would set foot within a mile of where you lived.

It always seemed a little wierd to me, unless there's something I'm missing...
I actually think that the developments will minimize the problems of this neighborhood, not amplify it. You can see it happening already with the construction of the 3rd Street Light Rail. People are slowly getting pushed out while this neighborhood begins to gentrify. Now, its not going to be perfect, and I'm not sure if I'd want to live there, but increased wealth will mean things such as new stores/restaurants overtaking abandoned lots, additional police in the area and more scrutiny in general.
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Old Posted May 18, 2008, 2:57 AM
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From http://sf.curbed.com/archives/2008/0...using.php#more

Quote:
CurbedWire Late Edition: Lennar Corp. Agreement Allows for More Affordable Housing
Friday, May 16, 2008, by Sarah Hromack

HUNTERS POINT—Paging Chris Daly: Developer Lennar Corp. is playing for keeps on the affordable housing front. From the press release issued by the SF Labor Council:

The San Francisco Labor Council, along with its community and interfaith partners, ACORN (Association for Community Organizations for Reform Now) and SFOP (San Francisco Organizing Project) have reached a groundbreaking agreement with Lennar Urban that provides the largest creation of affordable housing of any new development in the city’s history.

Under the agreement, a total of approximately 3,500 new homes that are affordable to very low-income and working families will be constructed in the Hunters Point Shipyard – Candlestick Point and throughout District 10. The vast majority will be constructed as part of the mixed-use development project; in addition, Lennar has committed $27.3 million to provide hundreds more affordable homes throughout District 10. Lennar has also agreed to provide $8.5 million for workforce training.

San Francisco Labor Council & Allies to Sign Historic Community Benefit Agreement with Lennar Corporation

Agreement will create 3,500 units of New Housing Affordable to very low-income and Working Families

What: The San Francisco Labor Council, along with its community and interfaith partners, ACORN (Association for Community Organizations for Reform Now) and SFOP (San Francisco Organizing Project) have reached a groundbreaking agreement with Lennar Urban that provides the largest creation of affordable housing of any new development in the city’s history.

Under the agreement, a total of approximately 3,500 new homes that are affordable to very low-income and working families will be constructed in the Hunters Point Shipyard – Candlestick Point and throughout District 10. The vast majority will be constructed as part of the mixed-use development project; in addition, Lennar has committed $27.3 million to provide hundreds more affordable homes throughout District 10. Lennar has also agreed to provide $8.5 million for workforce training. Labor, ACORN and SFOP have endorsed Proposition G on the June 3rd ballot and are recommending a no vote on a rival measure, Proposition F.

“We looked at Proposition G carefully and did our homework,” said Tim Paulson, Executive of the San Francisco Labor Council. “This is the best deal for working families, for the Bayview community and for the city of San Francisco. Proposition G offers real jobs, real hope and a true vision for Bayview-Hunters Point. At the end of the day, Proposition F represents a dead end that would subvert a decade of community planning. It is meant to repel progress, not encourage it, and would set a bad precedent for San Francisco.”

“We look forward to working with Lennar, the Citizens Advisory Committee, and the Project Area Committee in a progressive partnership to ensure that the needs of the Bayview community are addressed,” added Paulson.

Additional details regarding the historic agreement will be provided to the public and news media at this event.

When: Tuesday, May 20, at 1:30 pm, San Francisco Labor Council, 1188 Franklin Street, 2nd Floor

Who: Attendees will include Mayor Gavin Newsom, Tim Paulson, Executive Director of the San Francisco Labor Council and representatives from the Association for Community Reform Now (ACORN), the San Francisco Organizing Project (SFOP), tenant leaders from Alice Griffith public housing project, Carpenters Union Local 22, Plumbers Union Local 38, among others. Leaders from the Bayview-Hunters Point community are also scheduled to appear including representatives from the Citizens Advisory Committee and Project Area Committee.
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Old Posted May 18, 2008, 3:07 AM
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I got these shots from http://www.sfgov.org/site/sfra_page.asp?id=5588.

It would be worthwhile downloading and looking through the whole document.

































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Old Posted May 18, 2008, 6:23 PM
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3500 affordable units seperated from the city. sounds like a great way to make a permanent slum.
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Old Posted May 19, 2008, 3:26 PM
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Gordo Gordo is offline
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Originally Posted by POLA View Post
3500 affordable units seperated from the city. sounds like a great way to make a permanent slum.
I dunno, it's 3500 of a total of 9000 units, and "affordable" of today does not equal the "projects" of the past. I haven't seen mention of the exact breakdown of these affordable units, but I'm sure most are 80-120% of AMI, which is pretty damn middle class.
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