I look forward to two new 270' apartment towers in Oakland. Seriously, if there's a Bay Area candidate for a massive Vancouver-style residential transformation, it's downtown Oaktown. There's no ambience to ruin, no community to displace, almost limitless potential for vibrancy both day and night, and a wealth of good transit, pedestrian and bike infrastructure such that new residents don't have to drive everywhere all the time.
The office tower proposal for 601 City Center appears to be around 300' tall. If they do in fact convert the proposal to residential, that envelope can contain a hell of a lot of housing, right in the heart of downtown Oakland.
I know I'm not alone in wondering, during one of San Francisco's biggest building booms of all time, why downtown Oakland isn't also a sea of cranes. While I understand some timidity on the part of developers--every now and then, Oakland turns into a riot zone--but it won't always be that way, and the easy proximity to SF is unmatched. You can get to downtown SF faster from Oakland than you can from the outer neighborhoods in the Richmond and Sunset.
Oakland can and absolutely should be courting spillover from San Francisco--if you build it, they will come. Hopefully the incoming mayor will be able to deliver a more reassuring development environment and a faster, more predictable planning process. It's simply astounding that Jean Quan's tenure will have been marked by almost no highrise development whatsoever.
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"You need both a public and a private position." --Hillary Clinton, speaking behind closed doors to the National Multi-Family Housing Council, 2013
Last edited by fflint; Nov 10, 2014 at 10:04 PM.
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