The preliminary plans for an eight-story building with 143 below market rate apartments over 12,000 square feet of PDR space dedicated to the arts and a 4,400 square foot childcare center to rise on the northwest corner of Folsom and 16th Street in the Mission have been massed by Leddy Maytum Stacy Architects and submitted to the City for review.
As proposed the Mission Economic Development Agency (MEDA) and Tenderloin Neighborhood Development Center (TNDC), and with financing secured by Proposition A, twenty-nine (29) of the 1990 Folsom Street project’s units are to be earmarked for formerly homeless families with the remainder to be made available to households earning between 50 to 60 percent of San Francisco’s Area Median Income (AMI).
In addition to 23 studios and 42 one-bedrooms, the project as proposed includes 67 two-bedrooms averaging over 850 square feet and 10 three-bedrooms averaging over 1,450 square feet, “the unit size that is much in demand for families with children,” with a storage room for 156 bikes and 3 dedicated car share spaces on the street but no off-street garage.
And the development team is planning to partner with Art Space Development Corporation to operate the building’s PDR space at affordable rates, “to ensure that the space is accessible to working artists in perpetuity, while also extending the experience of the Latino Cultural District to the northeastern, industrial portion of the community.”
We’ll keep you posted and plugged-in as the plans progress.
UPDATE: As noted by a reader below, the 1990 Folsom Street site is currently zoned for Production, Distribution & Repair (PDR) uses, which explicitly prohibits housing, and limits development up to 58-feet in height as well. As such, the parcel will need to be rezoned by the City in order for the 85-foot-tall project to proceed as proposed.
Another example of the City not playing by their own rules and spot zoning. The property is zoned PDR and does not allow housing, now it allows for affordable housing and reduces the PDR to 12,000 SF.
100 Hooper did the same thing but found a loophole in the zoning and took a few acre PDR site and only put 85,000 SF of PDR space.
If the City can’t play by the zoning rules not sure it is fair to have tenants or owners play by the rules either with their PDR enforcement.
This entire block was the subject of my 1993-1994 terminal studio thesis design at University of Oregon 🙂
Let’s nimby protest this thing, and give the city a taste of its own medicine.
UPDATE: Affordable Units About to Rise on Previously Prohibited Site