As of last month, No Wall on The Waterfront had raised $234,000 and spent $104,000 in their campaign to block the approved development of 8 Washington Street at the ballot box.

In addition, Boston Properties, owner of 4 Embarcadero Center to the west of 8 Washington Street, has spent $125,750 to block the development, second only to the individual spending of Barbara Stewart whose Bay views would be blocked by the development as well.

At the same time, Open Up the Waterfront has raised $464,990 and spent $322,000 to promote a competing ballot measure which would allow for the development of 8 Washington Street, with Pacific Waterfront Partners (the developer) having contributed $214,990, Cahill Contractors (the builder) having contributed $150,000, and Skidmore Owings & Merrill (the designer) having contributed $100,000 to the campaign.

27 thoughts on “The Big Dollars Behind The 8 Washington Street Battle To Date”
  1. I just simply love that my money has allowed all of San Francisco to validate that my living room view is of the UTMOST importance!
    I love paying for democracy!

  2. James, Embacadero 4 is set quite far back from The Embarcadero. The one-block wide Justin Herman plaza is between the building and the road.
    Anyway, arguments like this are not valid, e.g. “if this bad thing exists, then another bad thing must be allowed to exist.” Sorry, no.

  3. The proponents of these measures should use more honest titles. How about:
    “No, don’t block my view”
    and:
    “Open up more sweetheart developer deals”

  4. No wonder MUNI is broken, when our political process is abused and dragged down like this.
    Will the city the knows how to whine ever sort itself out?

  5. Ugh, I’ll be voting no on both of these. This fight does not have me reconsidering my decision to vote no on all ballot props/init’s.

  6. Sure, and all the piers also form a wall on the waterfront, quite literally. And none of these are bad things. The tennis club is currently a black chain-link fence on the waterfront that blocks the view if you’re standing behind it… I’d rather have at least a wall of shops and restaurants.

  7. @rillion
    You realize that by voting no on both, you are aligning yourself with the no wall on the waterfront people.

  8. At this point I’d support an actual wall, if only to pizz off the obnoxious NIMBYs. Throw in some guard towers and razorwire. Forget about the stupid “Paris of the West” moniker, let’s be 1970s Berlin of the West.

  9. If Ms. Stewart prevails and this project is rejected, I hope she will spend some of her increased net worth on connecting the neighborhood to the waterfront at Jackson Street.

  10. Anyone against this is just an as*hole. Period!
    Why is this city so anti-progress? Someone should paint that mean old hags window black.

  11. @DB – you’re totally right. The private fenced off country club is much more of a “park” than anything the developer would build!

  12. This is obviously a terrible situation, where the neighborhood NIMBYS put on a referendum called “No Wall on the Waterfront” and the developer is forced to counteract with something, called “Open up the Waterfront.” While right thinking people may well want to say a pox on all their houses and vote No on both, this would result in the worst possible conclusion: The NIMBYs would win, and a very good, modestly sized development would lose. And thus the public would lose. Because of how these measures were written, the correct vote is Yes and Yes. Yes and Yes confirms the votes of the Planning Commission, the Board of Supervisors (twice), the Rec and Park Commission, and the State Lands Commission. And we get 134 new housing units, $11 million in affordable housing, public parks, a rebuilt rec club, $100m to the Port and City. And replacement of an eyesore with a beautiful new civic place.

  13. This is huge irony for owner of Embarcadero 4, a giant 30 floors concrete slab that can justifiably called a wall, to rail against a mid rise. The very existence of Embarcadero 4 should be a blessing to the much shorter 8 Washington. Look at the pictures the building step up so well to the much taller buildings in the background. Boston Properties is a total NIMBY.

  14. @bob: I believe if both fail to pass then it reverts to allowing the development as the “No Wall on the Waterfront” group is trying to overturn the exemption that has been granted to the development.

  15. Jim, same question basically as I posed to Bob, how come if both init’s fail that it results in blocking the development? My understanding of the history of this is that the ‘No Wall’ group went to the ballot in the first place to block this development, why do they win if their init fails? Seems to me their init would HAVE to pass in order to block this development. Am I missing something?

  16. @Jim, @Rillion – I agree, if a No vote on a “No Wall on the Waterfront” means the development is blocked, that’s misleading the voters. The initiative should be stricken from the ballot.

  17. Of course the biggest irony may be this: guess who was the project manager for the construction of Embarcadero Center? Simon Snellgrove.

  18. After reading Moto Mayhem’s comment i feel i have had my first Psychiatric encounter.
    “Anyone against this is just an as*hole. Period! Why is this city so anti-progress? Someone should paint that mean old hags window black.”
    The Redevelopment Agency sold at a low price this land to be used for recreation. Not condos.
    Then after calling us (as holes) he said some one should paint the hags window black. this is a crime to do so.
    Moto is a punk.

  19. My name is moto mayhem. Of course in a punk. Or at least I was 25 yrs ago:)
    You know I’m not serious about painting over a window, but people’s sense of entitlement is crazy! Lets block progress because we are currently on top. Well, people sitting on top always want to freeze time. Fortunately we have a pseudo democracy , to squash this type of monarchical despicable me ness

  20. The nature of the City is that it’s always growing and changing. Views are not guaranteed, and there’s nothing stopping people from strolling around the Embarcadero to soak in the waterfront. It’s ridiculous when the City is dealing with high housing demand and very little inventory that arguments like these still hold weight.

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