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San Francisco building and structure stubs (139 P) Pages in category "Buildings and structures in San Francisco" The following 59 pages are in this category, out of 59 total.
Despite years of claims from city officials that adding new home inventory is a public policy goal, San Francisco has granted just 16 new home construction permits in 2024. This comes against a ...
In March 2025, a former San Francisco Department of Building Inspection inspector, Van Zeng, was found guilty of violating conflict-of-interest laws. Zeng approved permits for properties owned by his parents and his father's construction company, Mutual Seiko Construction, where he had worked before joining the DBI.
Many of San Francisco's tallest buildings, particularly its office skyscrapers, [9] were completed in a building boom from the late 1960s until the late 1980s. [10] During the 1960s, at least 40 new skyscrapers were built, [ 11 ] and the Hartford Building (1965), 44 Montgomery (1967), Bank of America Center (1969), and Transamerica Pyramid ...
The Rincon Hill complex is the developer's second project in San Francisco, with the first being ONE Embarcadero South, a residential complex near One Rincon Hill and across from Oracle Park. [17] According to the developer the total cost of the Rincon Hill project was US$290 million, rising to over US$310 million in 2009.
South San Francisco Opera House: South San Francisco Opera House: March 21, 2011 : 4701–4705 Third St. and 1601 Newcomb Ave. Bayview-Hunters Point: 173: Southern Pacific Company Hospital Historic District
Running from Colma to Millbrae, South San Francisco's portion is three miles long, running through the center of town from the South San Francisco BART Station to the San Bruno BART Station (). The Class I bicycle and pedestrian trail is a 10' wide asphalt pathway with 2' decomposed granite shoulders, irrigated for low-maintenance landscaping ...
The tower will feature diagonal, exterior bracing and taper towards the top, reminiscent of the John Hancock Center in Chicago. [7] If completed as proposed, the 905-foot (276 m) tower would become San Francisco's second-tallest building after Salesforce Tower, surpassing the long time record-holder, the Transamerica Pyramid.