Housing Mega-Venture at San Francisco Mall Transferring Ahead

Brookfield has reached an agreement with the city government on a major project that will involve the construction of 3,500 residential units in the 40-acre Stonestown Galleria in San Francisco.
As part of the deal, the mall's owner will make 20 percent of the housing units – about 700 apartments – affordable. The new housing units will also include a senior village and a senior center, according to a report in the San Francisco Chronicle.
The deal still needs to be approved by the City of San Francisco Board of Supervisors, which recently reduced the amount of affordable housing that developers must include in their projects from 23.5 percent to 12 to 16 percent, depending on the size of the project.
Supervisor Myrna Melgar, who represents the area that includes Stonestown, said the 20 percent commitment for affordable housing in the project is the best thing the city can do in the current economic environment.
“I would have liked to ask for more, but given the circumstances — and given that it's more than they have to do — it's good,” Melgar told the Chronicle. “It's also great considering that nothing has been built on the west side in a very long time.”
The New York arm of the Toronto-based real estate giant first proposed a $2 billion redevelopment of the massive parking lot surrounding the 750,000-square-foot mall more than two years ago. The original plans, which called for preserving the 70-year-old mall, also included a hotel, but that was scrapped when housing was increased in the project.
The development will include a town square with outdoor dining, recreational areas and a plaza with a farmers market. Brookfield plans to create a new “Main Street” with shops, restaurants and a 14,000-square-foot corridor of entertainment along 20th Avenue.
The project will include six hectares of parking and a daycare center, the report said. Parking spaces would be built underground and next to shops.
Brookfield will contribute $1 million to improve playgrounds in the area and donate $2.7 million to Fire Station No. 19, which will serve the new neighborhood. The developer will also pay more than $50 million in development fees to the San Francisco Municipal Transit Agency, the report said.
The Stonestown Galleria is thriving in stark contrast to downtown San Francisco's largest shopping center, formerly known as the Westfield Center.
Last year, Brookfield Properties and Paris-based Unibail-Rodamco-Westfield stopped payments on a $558 million loan linked to the Westfield Centre and handed the keys to the half-empty mall to their lenders.
The name of the downtown mall, currently in receivership, has been changed to Emporium Centre San Francisco, a reference to the Emporium, a department store that opened there in 1896.