The Evergreen Market building at 2539 Mission Street is on the market with a $3.5 million price tag, not including its rear parking lot which fronts Capp Street and for which another $2.5 million is being sought.

Specializing in Latin American produce, meats and staples, the market is currently operating on a month-to-month lease and the building is slated to be delivered vacant “on negotiated terms.”

And as noted in the marketing materials for the property, the market building’s nearly 4,000-square-foot parcel is zoned for development up to 65 feet in height while the 4,000-square-foot parking lot is zoned for development up to 40 feet along Capp.

12 thoughts on “Evergreen Could Soon Be Evergone in the Misison”
  1. The better question is what is going on with the former theater next door? I seem to recall it was going to become some sort of gym and then nothing happened and now it’s just an open box for two (??) years now.

    1. Many of us have called for stronger punishment – or ANY punishment, really – for these permit scofflaws and I guess revocation qualifies as such…seems like kind of a hollow victory tho, figuratively and – here – quite literally.

      1. It seems like the real punishment is the cost of holding a property vacant for 2 years and for however much longer it takes to make the site active again which I assume is not going to be soon.

        1. Well, yes, but of course that’s the result of the revocation. A nice – as in poetic – touch would be if the permit is reinstated…w/ a condition.

          It will be interesting to see how that case is ultimately resolved – hopefully SS will keep us updated (UHMM!) – tho I’m skeptical a replica will actually emerge.

  2. Not too focus too much of the conversation around this post on the former theater next door, but – with the project’s permits revoked, a few questions:

    -Can the current owner/developer who illegally demolished the facade apply for new permits?
    -Is there some length of time during which the current owner/developer is banned from developing the property even if they were to secure new permits?
    -If the current owner/developer sold the site to someone else, I would assume that new owner would have to go through a new permitting process and, assuming permits are granted, could they begin work on it immediately?

    I would obviously like to see the former theater developed ASAP since it is such an eyesore and I’m just curious if the current owner/developer who broke the rules would have any avenue to re-starting their work or if their only real play is to sell the project. If they should sell, it would be great to see a buyer of both that site and the Evergreen site emerge and combine the sites into one project (if possible).

    1. Why would it be great to see a buyer combine the theater and the Evergreen site? That seems easier to make profitable (would could possibly translate into additional subsidized units?), but from a pedestrian/vibrant neighborhood/Jan Gehl perspective, a bigger building is more monotonous than multiple, narrow facades.

      1. I just want to see things move forward & get built, and I would think that 1 project would move faster than 2 independent ones. There should be economies of scale in having 1 larger project vs. 2 smaller ones so that should help keep costs down, and as you point out the net result would probably be more subsidized units than if 2 projects proceeded independently. Everybody wins, however I’m not holding my breath for that outcome to actually come to fruition.

  3. Ah, Evergreen. In the late 80’s and early 90’s they sold “tranquilizante vitaminados” on a roll at the register. I think the police let them do it because it kept all the speed/coke/etc. users mellow.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *