The appeal of Planning’s approval to rebuild upon the contentiously cleared lot at 1268 Lombard Street continues this afternoon with another public hearing in front of San Francisco’s Board of Supervisors today at at 4pm.
After the public hearing, and as a plugged-in reader long ago reported to expect, the room will most likely be cleared and the doors closed for a private session with the City Attorney to discuss “threatened litigation, potentially arising out of the proposed Parkmerced Development Project, where City may be either defendant or plaintiff in at least one case in either instance.”
After the closed door session, the Board will vote on whether or not to disclose what was discussed.
∙ Appealing Planning’s Approval To Willfully Rebuild 1268 Lombard [SocketSite]
∙ Proposed Plans For The Nearly “Historic” House Lot At 1268 Lombard [SocketSite]
∙ The “Resourceful” Demolition Of A Historic Resource? (1268 Lombard) [SocketSite]
∙ San Francisco Board of Supervisors Agenda: 5/3/11 [sfbos.org]
∙ Two Big Tests For San Francisco’s New Board Of Supervisors [SocketSite]
∙ Parkmerced’s Proposed Urban Design, Open Space, And Sustainability [SocketSite]
Once a building has been demolished is there anything the city can do to block development or at that point is it simply too late? I assume planning could try to block variances but are there any specific penalties for an illegal or ‘accidental’ demolition?