- Mission Bay, San Francisco
-
For other uses of the name, see Mission Bay (disambiguation).
Coordinates: 37°46′0.62″N 122°23′26.94″W / 37.7668389°N 122.3908167°W
Mission Bay — Neighborhood of San Francisco — Construction of the new UCSF campus at Mission Bay began in 1999. Location within Central San Francisco Coordinates: 37°46′13″N 122°23′27″W / 37.77018°N 122.39091°W Government - Board of Supervisors Jane Kim - State Assembly Tom Ammiano (D) - State Senate Mark Leno (D) - U.S. House Nancy Pelosi (D) Area[1] - Total 2.7 km2 (1.060 sq mi) - Land 2.7 km2 (1.060 sq mi) Population (2008)[1] - Total 1,948 - Density 709.7/km2 (1,838/sq mi) ZIP Code 94103, 94107 Area code(s) 415 Mission Bay is a 303-acre (1.23 km2) neighborhood in San Francisco, California.
Contents
Location
Mission Bay is roughly bounded by Townsend Street on the north, Third Street and San Francisco Bay on the east, Mariposa Street on the south, and 7th Street and Interstate 280 on the west.[2]
History
It was created in 1998 by the Board of Supervisors as a redevelopment project.[3] Much of the land was long a railyard of the Southern Pacific Railroad Company, and transferred to Catellus Development Corporation when it was spun off as part of the aborted merger of Southern Pacific and the Santa Fe Railway.[4] Catellus subsequently sold or sub-contracted several parcels to other developers. It has rapidly evolved in to a wealthy neighborhood of luxury condominiums, high-end restaurants and retail, and biotechnology research and development.[5]
Attractions and characteristics
Mission Bay is currently the headquarters of the California Institute for Regenerative Medicine. It is also the headquarters, at 550 Terry Francois Blvd, of the Old Navy brand of The Gap clothing retailer.[6][7] It is the location of a new research campus of the University of California, San Francisco, UCSF Mission Bay
- The future location of the 14 acre, two-million-square-foot Salesforce.com U.S. headquarters.[8]
- The northern terminus of the Third Street Light Rail Project of the San Francisco Municipal Railway
- The northern terminus of Caltrain
- An AT&T Fiber to the premises greenfield project
- The first new branch of the San Francisco Public Library in over 40 years, The Mission Bay Branch Library, opened on July 8, 2006. It is located on the ground floor of a new multi-use facility, which includes an adult day health center, affordable senior housing, retail space and a large community meeting room. The new library is approximately 7,500 square feet (700 m2), and is the 27th branch of the San Francisco Public Library.[9]
- 455 Mission Bay Boulevard South, originally planned to be the headquarters of Pfizer's Biotherapeutics and Bioinnovation Center (started construction August 5, 2008),[10] occupied by Nektar Therapeutics in November 2010 as their corporate headquarters.[11] The other half of the building will be occupied by Bayer's U.S. Innovation Center.[12]
- The future location of the San Francisco Public Safety Building at Third Street and Mission Rock. It will include a Police headquarters, Police Station and Mission Bay Fire Station. Funding for the building was passed with a 79.4 percent positive vote on Proposition B.[13]
- An estimated 56 biotech companies were clustered in Mission Bay in mid-2010.[14]
- The Blue Greenway waterfront trail.[15]
Mission Bay is served by the N Judah and T Third Street lines of San Francisco's Muni Metro. The N Judah links the neighborhood to Downtown, BART, Hayes Valley and the Sunset District, and the T Third Street links to downtown, BART, and the Bayview and Visitacion Valley neighborhoods. Several other Muni bus and trolley bus lines link the area to neighborhoods to the north, west and south. The Caltrain commuter rail system connects Mission Bay with San Jose and Gilroy. The proposed Central Subway project will make the link between Mission Bay, AT&T Park, Market Street-Union Square, and Chinatown even faster.
Although near to and often associated with AT&T Park, the ballpark is in the adjacent South Beach neighborhood. UCSF has announced plans to build a new 289-bed hospital serving children, women, and cancer patients on a portion of their property in the neighborhood.[16][17] Construction of the hospital began in October 2010.[18]
Mission Bay has a large residential component with approximately 6000 condos planned (1700 of them to be designated affordable).[3]
- The Beacon is one of the largest condominium complexes in San Francisco and anchors much of the activity in North Mission Bay. With 595 condominium units, it sits on a full city block bounded by Townsend to the north, King to the south and 3rd and 4th Streets. A Safeway anchors the retail sections of the building; a Borders bookstore recently closed, and its space has yet to be filled. The building's name refers to its being the first large scale mixed-use project planned for the new neighborhood, and thus "The Beacon" of the area's revival.[19] The California Institute for Regenerative Medicine also calls the Beacon home.[clarification needed]
- Glassworks is a mixed-use building with approximately 40 modern condos of varying floor plans and sizes, located directly across the AT&T Park at 3rd Street, between King and Berry Streets.
- Signature Properties has built two mid-rise condos on Berry Street: 255 Berry Street and 235 Berry Street. 255 Berry Street was completed in 2004 and 235 Berry Street in 2007. Both buildings sit between Berry Street and Mission Creek and consist mainly or two-bedroom units of various sizes and floor plans. The first floors contain townhome style condos. Units facing south have views of the creek and South Mission Bay.
- Arterra is San Francisco's first LEED-certified market-rate condominium building, located on Fifth Street, between Berry and King Streets (300 and 325 Berry Street). The project consists of three connected buildings, each in a different exterior color: "City" (nine stories), "Park" (six stories) and "Sky" (16 stories). There are a total of 268 condos in the complex.[20]
- Park Terrace (325 Berry Street) is similar in construction to both 255 Berry Street and 235 Berry Street in style and height (nine-story mid-rise). 110 condos were recently completed.
- Radiance at Mission Bay[21] is in the south part of Mission Bay, adjacent to the Bay. It will be completed in two phases: the first phase is completed and is a fully occupied 99-condo building on the waterfront. The second phase (under construction beginning August 2010) will contain 315 condos farther north. Bosa Development has bought multiple residential parcels in Mission Bay and Radiance is their first project in the area.[citation needed]
- Strata is a luxury apartment complex near the UCSF campus.[22]
Mission Bay Parks[23] completed as of fall 2010 include: Mission Creek, Mission Bay Commons lots on Mission Bay Boulevard between Radiance and the Nektar/Bayer buildings, the 5th street plaza, the sports courts, Koret Quad and China Basin Park. Future Mission Bay parks plans[24] include Bay Front Park, a little league diamond and a junior soccer field.
External links
- The San Francisco Redevelopment Agency, Mission Bay
- SF New Developments - Mission Bay
- Mission Bay Parks Mission Bay Parks
References
- ^ a b [1]
- ^ Mission Bay Map
- ^ a b San Francisco Redevelopment Agency: Mission Bay
- ^ King, John (October 23, 2000). "Groundbreaking Today for Big Chunk of Mission Bay". San Francisco Chronicle. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2000/10/23/MN101064.DTL. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
- ^ Alexandria's Mission Bay Development Plan
- ^ Carroll, Melanie (August 10, 2006). "Old Navy Heads for the Water". San Francisco Examiner. http://www.sfnewdevelopments.com/1737/old-navy-heads-for-the-water-2. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
- ^ Dineen, J.K. (December 1, 2006). "Workers invade Mission Bay". San Francisco Business Times. http://sanfrancisco.bizjournals.com/sanfrancisco/stories/2006/12/04/story2.html. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
- ^ Temple, James (November 1, 2010). "Salesforce.com planning huge Mission Bay headquarters". The San Francisco Chronicle. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/blogs/techchron/detail?entry_id=75983.
- ^ Mission Bay Branch Library grand opening announcement
- ^ Bernadette Tansey (2008-08-05). "Viagra maker erecting new biotech building in S.F.". San Francisco Chronicle. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/08/05/MNDK125K10.DTL&tsp=1.
- ^ [2]
- ^ [3]
- ^ [4]
- ^ [5]
- ^ [6]
- ^ UCSF to Build World-Class Medical Center at Mission Bay
- ^ Facts About UCSF Medical Center at Mission Bay
- ^ [7]
- ^ King, John (May 16, 2005). "The shape of things to come". San Francisco Chronicle. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2005/05/16/BAGKNCPN061.DTL. Retrieved 2007-11-11.
- ^ John King (2008-08-05). "Mission Bay condominium complex stands out". San Francisco Chronicle. http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2008/08/05/DD2A121IVR.DTL&hw=mission+bay&sn=002&sc=343.
- ^ [8]
- ^ [9]
- ^ [10]
- ^ [11]
Neighborhoods of San Francisco, California Downtown Chinatown · Civic Center · Financial District · Mid-Market · Nob Hill · North Beach · Mission Bay · South of Market · Telegraph Hill · Tenderloin · Union Square
North of Downtown Cow Hollow · Fisherman's Wharf · Marina District · Pacific Heights · Presidio · Russian Hill · Treasure Island · Yerba Buena Island
Outside Lands Forest Hill · Ingleside · Ingleside Terraces · Ocean View · Parkside · Richmond · Sea Cliff · St. Francis Wood · Sunset District · West Portal · Westwood Highlands · Westwood Park
Western Addition Alamo Square · Anza Vista · Cathedral Hill · Cole Valley · Corona Heights · Duboce Triangle · Fillmore · Haight-Ashbury · Hayes Valley · Japantown · Laurel Heights · Lower Haight · Pacific Heights · Presidio · Western Addition
Southern Bayview-Hunters Point · Bernal Heights · Castro · Crocker-Amazon · Diamond Heights · Dogpatch · Eureka Valley · Excelsior District · Glen Park · Mission District · Noe Valley · Outer Mission · Portola · Potrero Hill · Visitacion Valley
List · Category · Portal Categories:
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.