Your District Supervisor recently after a very lengthy community iterative process and the expenditure of millions of dollars, two developments trying to go forward could not in fact. And so that is thats what sometimes happens when the risks are great, the costs are high, and we get these Great Community benefits that then tip those particular parcels and i think you know the two that im thinking of. I do know the two you are thinking of, and one has been purchased by the city and 100 Affordable Housing. I dont know if its the worst outcome from that project. I dont think we need to belabor this point, i dont think you can point to one example and thats what worries me, right . I mean aside from little excellent arguments made by my colleagues around, you know, sort of putting a definition of Affordable Housing that includes one individual who earns 128,000 a year, which is very problematic, i dont think it would work anyway because what developer who whats the 1956, you get like an a
Greenhouse buildings, organized into two rose, and although the greenhouses were built over several decades between 1921 and 1951, they are already woodframe structures with gable roofs and feature similar massing, orientation, and design. Additional buildings on the property include a onestory woodframe boiler house constructed circa 1922, and a onestory garage and storage structure constructed in 1958. The site features include various metal tanks for water and pesticides, two hand dug wells, a woodframe shed, in approximately 20,450 square feet of open space. The subject property, as a cut flower nursery from 1921 until 1990 by the garibaldi brothers. They immigrated to San Francisco from italy in the early 20th century and were one of several italian born families that owned and operated cut flower nursery is in the city, particularly in the portola neighborhood, 770 woolsey was one of 20 similar cut flower nurseries in the portola district in the early 20 th century. The garibaldi
Structure constructed in 1958. The site features include various metal tanks for water and pesticides, two hand dug wells, a woodframe shed, in approximately 20,450 square feet of open space. The subject property, as a cut flower nursery from 1921 until 1990 by the garibaldi brothers. They immigrated to San Francisco from italy in the early 20th century and were one of several italian born families that owned and operated cut flower nursery is in the city, particularly in the portola neighborhood, 770 woolsey was one of 20 similar cut flower nurseries in the portola district in the early 20 th century. The garibaldi family were also members of the San Francisco Flower Growers association, which was a Business Group established by the local italian community. This association worked in partnership with similar japanese and chinese flower cut organizations to establish San Franciscos first wholesale market in 1924. Followed by the current San Francisco flower terminal in 1956. The subjec
100,000 more per unit because we cant access federal and state funds for those apartments, and so we have those cost constraints that really are important to consider. If were putting 100,000 extra to put an apartment that is affordable to somebody at 100 of a. M. I. Or 120 of a. M. I. Then that means less Affordable Housing to other groups of people who are desperately in need, like people experiencing homelessness. What we have by increasing the definition of middleIncome Housing, it does two things. It reaches more middleincome houses, and for a household of three, looking at for a twobedroom apartment on the market, if instead of paying the market rent, which is about 4600 a month if youre out there on your own, looking for an apartment, you would save 1,000 a month at that 40 a. M. I. Rent. 1,000 a month for a working family. That is significant. That makes a difference, and that could be the decisifactor family deciding to stay in San Francisco or not. This is simply an additive
Affordable Housing Development so the more Affordable Housing the better. We have also seen deals and in your District Supervisor recently after a very lengthy community iterative process and the expenditure of millions of dollars, two developments trying to go forward could not in fact. And so that is thats what sometimes happens when the risks are great, the costs are high, and we get these Great Community benefits that then tip those particular parcels and i think you know the two that im thinking of. I do know the two you are thinking of, and one has been purchased by the city and 100 Affordable Housing. I dont know if its the worst outcome from that project. I dont think we need to belabor this point, i dont think you can point to one example and thats what worries me, right . I mean aside from little excellent arguments made by my colleagues around, you know, sort of putting a definition of Affordable Housing that includes one individual who earns 128,000 a year, which is very pr