Zephyr Real EstateMarin Agents Kemp and Kennedy List San Anselmo Estate

SAN FRANCISCO, May 15, 2017 — Nathalie Kemp and Julie Kennedy, top agents from Zephyr’s Marin office, have just listed the stunning Sleepy Hollow estate at 121 Deer Hollow Road. The Italianate villa is graced with a grand and stately entry that includes a multi-level Old World fountain.

 Zephyr Real EstateMarin Agents Kemp and Kennedy List San Anselmo Estate

121 Deer Hollow Road, San Anselmo property, facade

 Zephyr Real EstateMarin Agents Kemp and Kennedy List San Anselmo Estate

121 Deer Hollow Road, San Anselmo property, pool

 Zephyr Real EstateMarin Agents Kemp and Kennedy List San Anselmo Estate

121 Deer Hollow Road, San Anselmo, stairway

Photos accompanying this announcement are available at
http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/951dd82b-6323-42b6-99c2-71f0f8ce27af

http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/8d416002-a883-4cd7-9ad6-12f20d84c99c

http://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/184119fb-5093-4744-9fe8-f6f793531db7

The sprawling home sits on a near-one-acre private lot, and possibilities abound inside and out. The manor house has five bedrooms and five and one-half baths. Beyond that, there is space for every practical function and for many indulgences. The wine connoisseur, film aficionado, epicurean, artist, musician, bibliophile, athlete, or aspiring author are sure to find space and a place to inspire and delight in the many specialty rooms. A wine cellar, screening room, library, office, bonus room and chef’s kitchen are all part of the home, and elegant and whimsical details beckon you through all three floors of gracious living space.

The grounds are beautifully and artfully designed to be enjoyed and to be used. Whether entertaining, meditating, relaxing, communing with nature, swimming, ziplining, hosting secret club meetings in the professionally-built treehouse, strolling through the gardens, grilling in the outdoor kitchen, shooting hoops, swaying in the pergola swing, the list of outdoor possibilities seems as endless as those indoors.

The property was extensively remodeled in 2005, and includes an abundance of upscale features. The kitchen, which was completely re-done in 2013, has two Thermador side-by-side refrigerators/freezers, two dishwashers, a six-burner Wolf range, quartz countertops and an abundance of custom touches. Each of the rooms is equally outfitted with a vibrant and creative flair.

The property is listed at $3.5 million. For more information or to schedule an appointment, contact Nathalie Kemp at natkemp@zephyrmarin.com or 415.819.4225. Julie Kennedy may be reached at juliekennedy@zephyrmarin.com or 415.497-8584.

About Zephyr Real Estate
Founded in 1978, Zephyr Real Estate is San Francisco’s largest independent real estate firm with nearly $2.3 billion in gross sales and a current roster of more than 300 full-time agents. Zephyr’s highly-visited website has earned two web design awards, including the prestigious Interactive Media Award. Zephyr Real Estate is a member of the international relocation network, Leading Real Estate Companies of the World; the luxury real estate network, Who’s Who in Luxury Real Estate; global luxury affiliate, Mayfair International; and local luxury marketing association, the Luxury Marketing Council of San Francisco. Zephyr has six offices in San Francisco, a Marin County office in Greenbrae, a San Mateo County business center in Burlingame, and two brokerage affiliates in Sonoma County, all strategically positioned to serve a large customer base throughout the San Francisco Bay Area. For more information, visit www.ZephyrRE.com.

 Zephyr Real EstateMarin Agents Kemp and Kennedy List San Anselmo Estate

Contact: Melody Foster
Zephyr Real Estate
San Francisco, CA
415.426.3203
melodyfoster@zephyrsf.com

 Zephyr Real EstateMarin Agents Kemp and Kennedy List San Anselmo Estate

 Zephyr Real EstateMarin Agents Kemp and Kennedy List San Anselmo Estate

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Article source: http://www.econotimes.com/Zephyr-Real-EstateMarin-Agents-Kemp-and-Kennedy-List-San-Anselmo-Estate-702352

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China Minsheng Buys 80% Stake in SF Bayside Project for Reported $100M

78fdd 75 Howard Images.7 page 001 400x225 China Minsheng Buys 80% Stake in SF Bayside Project for Reported $100M

China Minsheng’s Howard Street deal will bring more high-end homes to San Francisco’s waterfront

One of China’s largest private investment groups has teamed up with partners in the US to invest in a waterfront development site in San Francisco, joining a growing number of mainland and Hong Kong investors that are betting on the booming Bay Area property market.

A real estate developer controlled by China’s Minsheng Investment Group acquired an 80 percent interest in the fully entitled luxury residential site located two blocks away from the Bay Bridge, for approximately $100 million, according to local media reports.

The deal marks the first North American investment for China Minsheng subsidiary SRE Group, a Hong Kong-listed developer (HKG:1207) focused on first-tier cities in China. SRE acquired the site through a joint venture with a fund controlled by New York-based real estate firm Paramount Group and an affiliate of Chicago-based developer The John Buck Company.

Quenching a Thirst for Premium Housing

78fdd dong wenbiao china minsheng 400x296.jpeg.pagespeed.ce.1zdqe3vnR7 China Minsheng Buys 80% Stake in SF Bayside Project for Reported $100M

MInsheng Group chairman Dong Wenbiao seems to think he can take it to the next level in SF

Although the price of the transaction was not disclosed, local real estate website The Registry cited sources familiar with the transaction as indicating that the Chinese group agreed to pay $100 million for its stake, while the San Francisco Business Times put the figure at $110 million. The proposed project is located at 75 Howard Street, next to the iconic Embarcadero boulevard along San Francisco Bay. An eight-storey parking garage currently sits on the 20,021 square foot (1,860 square metre) land parcel. The joint venture plans to develop the site into a 21-storey, 120-unit luxury condominium project with a ground-floor restaurant, designed by Skidmore, Owings Merrill (SOM).

The only entitled development site on the waterfront, the project was narrowly approved by the city’s Board of Appeals amidst some controversy about its design and expected impact on the neighborhood. Global property consulting firm JLL concluded the transaction as the exclusive sales agent, while law firm Paul Hasting served as a legal advisor to SRE Group on the deal.

“The market is bolstered by high entry barriers and a scarcity of available land, which have in turn limited the inventory of prime luxury condominiums,” Flora Wang, national director of JLL’s International Capital Group said of San Francisco’s noted short supply of new homes. Residential pricing in San Francisco has increased dramatically in recent years due to a severe shortage of housing brought on by record-breaking job growth and a steady influx of new, wealthy residents, particularly in the Bay Area.”

The San Francisco Business Times notes that the Bay Area is now undergoing a boom in residential construction that should slake some of the intense demand for housing as thousands of new apartments and condos are delivered in 2017.

Betting on the Bay Area

The deal represents SRE Group’s first foray into US real estate, following its purchase of the central London headquarters of Société Générale for £84.5 million ($112.8 million)  last September. SRE’s parent, China Minsheng, invests in a diverse array of industries from aviation to new energy and senior care, and is reportedly seeking to ramp up overseas acquisitions in 2017.

China Minsheng is just the latest Chinese heavyweight to jump into the Bay Area real estate market. Beijing-based developer Sino-Ocean Land spent $42 million to acquire an office building in San Francisco’s up-and-coming SOMA commercial district less than two miles south of the Embarcadero for $42 million, it was reported earlier this month. Developer China Vanke bought a pair of commercial buildings in the same area in March for an undisclosed sum, with some market analysts predicting that China’s number two home builder will use the projects for a condo development.

China Oceanwide, another developer headquartered in Beijing, bought the two million square foot (186,000 square metre), mixed-use First and Mission project for $296 million in 2015. The supertall project will be located in the South Financial District next to the Embarcadero.

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Article source: http://www.mingtiandi.com/real-estate/outbound-investment/china-minsheng-buys-80-stake-in-sf-waterfront-project-for-reported-100m/

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Bay Area House Hunters Face Bidding Wars

SAN FRANCISCO (CBS SF) – The dilemma Natalia Melendez and John Uphoff are facing is foreign to most Americans.

In the majority of the country, a $1 million budget for a new home carries with it the promise of acres of land, dozens of rooms and a major upgrade from the white picket fence.

Not in the Bay Area.

“We need to buy a house to save money,” Uphoff said. “It’s kind of crazy like in Minnesota it’s very different.”

Melendez and Uphoff moved to the Bay Area from Minnesota to follow their dreams of success in the tech industry. Two months ago, they had their first child Jason, so now they are in the market for a 3-bedroom home.

However, the couple has lived in the Bay Area long enough to no longer be victims of sticker shock.

“You kind of get used to it like desensitized,” Melendez said. “When we first moved here we were like that is insane, how can that be? And now it’s like the reality.”

Inventory for homes for sale across the country is at a 20-year low, particularly in San Francisco. And competition is high. So is the pressure to offer more money for a less than perfect home.

Take a four-bedroom home the couple looked at in San Francisco’s Mission District. It has not really been upgraded him the 1960s with vintage bathroom fixings and original kitchen appliances.

The fixer-upper hit the market at $1,348,000. Within a week – the seller received 28 offers.

For Melendez and Uphoff even stretching their budget to $1.4 million was not enough to compete. In the end, the home went for well over $2 million — $700,000 over asking.

Currently, the couple is paying $7,000-a-month to rent a 2-bedroom at NEMA, a luxury San Francisco high rise.

John is a senior level software engineer at an “HR and benefits” startup, and Natalia is a senior account manager at a marketing company.

“We both make a decent amount of money and we’re not able to save anything,” Natalia said. “Everything goes to rent and the car and everything, so it’s insane.”

(New research shows that nearly half of millennials want to leave the Bay Area in the next few years because of sky-high housing prices and cost of living.

Data shows that among the country’s priciest cities, people in San Francisco are the most likely to leave.

For the moment, the couple is determined to stay in the Bay Area and live in San Francisco.

“We want to make it work – it’s really, really cold in Minnesota,” Melendez said.

Article source: http://sanfrancisco.cbslocal.com/2017/05/10/bay-area-house-hunters-face-bidding-wars/

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YIMBYs: The "Alt-Right" Darlings of the Real Estate Industry – Truth

5bde5 2017 0510yimby YIMBYs: The "Alt Right" Darlings of the Real Estate Industry   TruthSonja Trauss, founder of the pro-gentrification Bay Area Renters Federation, at her office in San Francisco, March 24, 2016. (Photo: Andrew Burton / The New York Times)

In San Francisco’s Mission District, flyers pasted on mailboxes and light poles warn longtime residents of the new “conquistadores,” the hordes of wealthy tech industrialists who’ve descended on the neighborhood en masse over the past few years, displacing many in the Latinx-heavy neighborhood to the outer reaches of the Bay Area.

But it’s not just lower-income people who are feeling set upon. Rich newcomers also see themselves as an interest group in need of a voice. “Someone needs to represent people who haven’t yet moved into a neighborhood,” said pro-development activist Sonja Trauss, who moved to Oakland in 2011, at an April real estate industry soiree in Vancouver. In San Francisco, “the people who haven’t yet moved in” most often means the tech industrialists, lured by high salaries, stock options and in-office employee benefits like massage therapists and handcrafted kombucha.

But these new tech “immigrants,” as Trauss refers to her kinfolk, spell disaster for current San Franciscans. In 2015, the city-funded homeless count found 71 percent of homeless San Franciscans were housed in San Francisco before being pushed onto the streets.

Some have given up, leaving the Bay altogether. Others are funneled into modern-day debtor’s prisons as regulations against homeless encampments, new jail expansion across the region and increased militarized policing through Urban Shield and other social control projects have coincided with new incubators of this quickly replicating tech invasion, such as Uber’s new anchor headquarters in downtown Oakland.

A Campaign to Legitimize the Luxury Condo Boom

A founder of the Yelp.com web empire, Jeremy Stoppelman, bequeathed $100,000 upon new Oakland resident Trauss in 2015, with the stated goal of clearing the way for more housing units, even if those units were only accessible to the richest of the rich. That investment helped to spark a libertarian, anti-poor campaign to turn longtime sites of progressive organizing into rich-people-only zones. 

YIMBYs [Yes in My Back Yard] accuse anti-gentrification activists — those calling for affordable units instead of luxury ones — of preventing the construction of new housing development, thus reducing the new housing supply and driving up rents. But while YIMBYism is championed as progressive urban policy, critics like activist Tory Becker of the anti-gentrification direct action group LAGAI, believe it’s actually rooted in the same classist, racist ideologies it supposedly seeks to disrupt. 

If simple supply and demand were a universal solution to rising housing inequality, then building new housing units in cities where the costs of living are high would indeed be a route to cheaper, better housing for all. However, the real world doesn’t work that way, and the YIMBYs’ “build, build, build” platform only stands to benefit a fortunate few.

The reality is that a low-income family of color who has lived in an area for years does not have the economic or cultural capital of the tech-moneyed arrivals who’ve got the local police station saved in their frequent contacts list.

The Anti-Eviction Mapping Project, a project tracking displacement and evictions in the Bay Area, recently joined with the Eviction Defense Collaborative and San Mateo Legal Aid to conduct research on who is being evicted and why. The results were revealing.

“We found evictions are severely impacting poor and working-class Black and Latinx residents, seniors, female-headed households, non-English-speaking residents and households with children,” Erin McElroy, founder and researcher for the Anti-Eviction Mapping Project, told Truthout. “Disproportionately, those in [YIMBY movement] leadership roles are in tech and are young, white men.”

High-income earners, like the tech workers who can afford market-rate housing, are effectively displacing communities and small businesses that depend on lower-income inclusionary housing and land-use policies, such as rent control that offer protection from unregulated market forces; protections won because of decades of grassroots activism by working class communities of color. For example, the famous 1977 International Hotel anti-eviction campaign led by Asian American leftists and Filipino elders in San Francisco’s then-sanctuary for Filipinos known as Manilatown, sparked both community development and tenants’ rights movements against the onset of neoliberal racial capitalism.

YIMBYs brand the activists continuing the tenant’s rights legacy as “NIMBYs” who are aligning themselves with wealthy homeowners. However, activists like Becker and McElroy, who have been in the game for much longer than Trauss and company, foresee a new wave of redevelopment like that of the 1960s and 1970s, when “urban renewal” made a few people rich, while leaving large swathes of city dwellers homeless or forced to migrate out of the areas where their families had lived for generations. In the 1960s writer James Baldwin remarked that San Francisco’s “urban renewal” of its then-Black-majority Fillmore district was “negro removal.” Under the YIMBY flag, the same is happening today with low-income Black, Latinx and transgender people of color being the core targets of displacement. The YIMBY movement’s developer allies and tech-employed urbanites stand to profit off this disruption of communities.

Just a couple years later, Trauss is now leading an army with soldiers around the world, from Boulder to Bratislava, while dominating the dialogue on how to deal with the very real problem of housing inequality. Entrenched online in the libertarian strongholds of Reddit and TechCrunch, and in the real world through real estate- and tech-sponsored nonprofits like SPUR and YIMBY Action, Trauss’s followers live by the neoliberal belief that deregulation and building more housing, even if it’s only affordable to the richest of the rich, will trickle down and eventually make housing affordable for all. Her vision is Reagonomics “dressed up in a progressive sheep’s costume,” according to Becker. But Trauss’s “fresh approach” to the dilemma of exploding housing costs has got conservative libertarians and lefty media outlets alike foaming at the mouth for more.

A Grassroots Facade

In its recent portrait of Trauss and the movement she helped to spark, The New Yorker noted that Trauss breakfasted last fall with PayPal cofounder and Trump advisor Peter Thiel. Trauss explained to Truthout in an email on April 26 that she “got an introduction to him from a mutual acquaintance,” and had met with him with the goal of raising money for her cause.

Trauss “had the oatmeal,” The New Yorker reported, while Thiel ate quiche. Details like these represent the media’s overwhelming depiction of the queen of YIMBY, which paints her as an in-the-trenches upstart who’s disrupting the affordable housing movement, without digging into the question of whom YIMBY ideals really benefit. Using tactics and lingo adapted from progressive movements, YIMBY is gaining traction in places where tenants’ rights groups have managed to push back against the gentrification of cities that have historically been socially and economically welcoming to low-income people, immigrants and people of color, like the Bay Area, New York City, and Toronto.

“YIMBY brings together community groups, advocates, and grassroots organizations,” reads the Toronto YIMBY Party’s website. But North America’s first YIMBY convening, YIMBY2016, was funded by groups, such as the National Association of Realtors and the Boulder Area Realtor Association.

With President Trump experiencing a massive drop in popularity, Trauss later participated in a protest outside top Trump-ally Thiel’s house. “What was Trauss doing aligning herself with a rightwing conservative like Thiel in the first place?” asks Becker, who believes Trauss espouses “social fabric-ripping” beliefs that are, in effect, “white supremacist.”

Are the people-of-color-led community groups like Causa Justa that supported a moratorium on luxury condo construction ”just as bad” as anti-immigrant Trump supporters? Trauss thinks so, calling people who didn’t support new market-rate condo projects in central San Francisco “nativists” because they don’t welcome with open arms the construction cranes building lavish condos with butterfly gardens and valet parking in traditionally working-class neighborhoods.

McElroy says Trauss’s allegations disregard the anti-racist organizing by Latinx groups in the Mission District. “This YIMBY tactic [of calling Latinx organizers 'anti-immigrant'] depends upon both ‘All Lives Matter’ and free-market logics, not to mention the idea that the knowledge produced by housing justice groups is inferior, outmoded and irrelevant.”

However, with a combination of supporters with fat wallets — real estate speculators, development corporations and homeowners concerned with increasing their own property values — and a smart public relations game, YIMBY has mounted a formidably destructive campaign in barely three years. It is steamrolling the traditional housing movement concept of centering the most vulnerable populations: the homeless, the poor people living paycheck-to-paycheck and the ever-dwindling middle class. “Now Hiring” signs are gathering dust in the windows of restaurants and retail shops across the city as lower-income people who serve the wealthy their $6 pieces of toast on carb-free cheat days can’t afford to live in the city anymore.

Deadly Neoliberal Policies

Infill, with its self-aware, geek-chic name, is the podcast that Trauss co-hosts with another YIMBY-to-watch, Laura Foote Clark. When Truthout asked for evidence that the YIMBY trickle-down model would benefit people who aren’t making tech salaries, Foote Clark was quick to send a dozen papers that claim to show how neoliberal deregulation will end the housing crisis, and that rich NIMBYs are the main benefactors of further regulation.

But tell that to people like Iris Canada, the 100-year-old Black woman who had used local regulations to stay in her home of six decades, only to be evicted in February. “This eviction killed her,” Iris’s niece, also named Iris, said at a March 29 vigil for her aunt, who died from a stroke just a month after her eviction.

What Foote Clark sells as objective economics are neoliberal policies that Truthout and others have widely debunked — policies which are set up to kill anyone without lots of money. The experiences of dozens of tenants like Canada, those who have died because of the crisis of neoliberal urbanism, are utterly disappeared from such studies. As McElroy cautions, YIMBY policies are “divorced from longstanding on-the-ground organizing and analytics produced by those whose lives are most impacted by hyper-gentrification.”

Foote Clark’s Oakland-based counterpart, Victoria Fierce, is a former techie who was bestowed enough cash by wealthy benefactors to work “as an activist full-time.” Fierce moved to the Bay Area three and a half years ago, and describes her YIMBY organization East Bay Forward as an “anarchist” group that wants to see market-rate housing built now so that in 30 years, low-income people might be able to afford to move here.

San Francisco Ethics office filings make contributions to political organizations like Trauss-ally SPUR available on its  website; the names of the country’s largest development companies like Boston Properties, Lennar and Shorenstein consistently show up on these contribution filings. These corporations are hardly the allies of “true anarchists that work around anti-capitalist principles,” says Becker. When asked about her organization’s alliance with SPUR and realtors, she responds that the groups have “a shared goal … so we work together.”

YIMBYs are engaging in — and sometimes winning — other battles. In Southern California, AIDS Healthcare Foundation (AHF) head Michael Weinstein led a campaign for a moratorium on luxury condos in quickly gentrifying downtown LA. He was attacked by YIMBYs who characterized Weinstein as a zillionaire who “didn’t like another building blocking the view from his office.”

Weinstein wrote in response: “We have witnessed how San Francisco, where AHF has clinics for testing and treatment, has become a rich ghetto. Low-income people by the tens of thousands have been displaced, and diversity is harder and harder to find. The same thing is unfolding in Los Angeles.” Up the coast, in 2015, a reported 20 percent of HIV-positive people left San Francisco. “The reason is displacement,” said Brian Basinger, head of the HIV housing nonprofit Q Foundation (formerly the AIDS Housing Alliance).

San Francisco’s Latinx-heavy Mission District and the Bayview neighborhood, one of the last bastions of Black life in the city, have been targets of the free-market “build, build, build” ideology.

So have progressive nonprofits like the Sierra Club, which faced two attempted takeovers by YIMBY politicos, attempting to control the Sierra Club’s stamp of approval (important in cities with progressive-leaning voters like San Francisco or Toronto) on development projects.

Decades-long progressive organizing — in communities actively fighting YIMBYs — around environmental and climate justice concerns are being “co-opted and rearranged” according to McElroy, who believes demands for social and economic justice “can’t be tethered to capitalist libertarian fantasies of disruption.” These campaigns include fighting a toxic power plant in the Hunters Point neighborhood and building new community agricultural projects in the Excelsior district.

The “deep contradictions within YIMBY logic can’t be ignored,” says Becker. In 2016, billionaire Stoppelman, whose pockets had helped Trauss out with her initial startup cash — what Trauss calls her “self-actualization funding” – famously fired an employee who publicly wrote that she couldn’t afford to live off the wages Yelp’s subsidiary Eat24 was paying her. “We are expanding our Eat24 customer support team into our Phoenix office,” he responded.

In the wake of other “alt-right” successes, the real estate industry is learning the art of dressing down, community activist-style. Under YIMBYnomics, more luxury condos will be built and people like Stoppelman will become richer, as the less wealthy are forcibly removed under a so-called “pro-housing” banner.

Article source: http://www.truth-out.org/news/item/40509-yimbys-the-alt-right-darlings-of-the-real-estate-industry

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The most affordable real estate in San Francisco’s most expensive …

http://www.sfgate.com/realestate/article/San-Francisco-real-estate-Pacific-Heights-11129836.php


Updated 5:42 am, Wednesday, May 10, 2017

  • 26201 920x920 The most affordable real estate in San Franciscos most expensive ...

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Affordable in Pacific Heights: one-bedroom condo, $649,000

A top-floor, 623-square-foot condo in Pacific Heights at 1819 Lyon St., Apt. 3, has loads of charm. 

Affordable in Pacific Heights: one-bedroom condo, $649,000

A top-floor, 623-square-foot condo in Pacific Heights at 1819 Lyon St., Apt. 3, has loads of charm. 


Photo: Open Homes Photography

Pocket doors separate the living and dining areas in top-floor condo in Pacific Heights at 1819 Lyon St., Apt. 3

Pocket doors separate the living and dining areas in top-floor condo in Pacific Heights at 1819 Lyon St., Apt. 3


Photo: Open Homes Photography

The kitchen in a top-floor condo in Pacific Heights at 1819 Lyon St., Apt. 3

The kitchen in a top-floor condo in Pacific Heights at 1819 Lyon St., Apt. 3


Photo: Open Homes Photography

A top-floor, 623-square-foot condo in Pacific Heights at 1819 Lyon St., Apt. 3, has loads of charm. 

A top-floor, 623-square-foot condo in Pacific Heights at 1819 Lyon St., Apt. 3, has loads of charm. 


Photo: Open Homes Photography

Affordable in Pacific Heights: two-bedroom, $3.5 million

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.

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Affordable in Pacific Heights: two-bedroom, $3.5 million

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect

… more

Photo: Open Homes Photography

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.


Photo: Open Homes Photography

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.


Photo: Open Homes Photography

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.


Photo: Open Homes Photography

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.


Photo: Open Homes Photography

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.


Photo: Open Homes Photography

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.


Photo: Open Homes Photography

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.


Photo: Open Homes Photography

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.


Photo: Open Homes Photography

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.


Photo: Open Homes Photography

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.


Photo: Open Homes Photography

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.


Photo: Open Homes Photography

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.


Photo: Open Homes Photography

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.

This classic Arts-and-Crafts home at 3157 Jackson St. has two bedrooms, two bathrooms and a beautiful garden designed by celebrated landscape architect Thomas Church.


Photo: Open Homes Photography


Shockingly high-priced listings get San Francisco’s Pacific Heights neighborhood a lot of attention. The $40 million mega-mansion at 2712 Broadway on the neighborhood’s most coveted three-block-stretch known as the Gold Coast was covered by media outlets across the country including SFGATE.

And so it comes as no surprise that Pacific Heights was named the city’s most expensive neighborhood in a recent report. Real estate analysis company NeighborhoodX teamed up with Curbed to generate a ranking of the city’s neighborhoods by real estate prices based on the average price per square foot and the range of prices per square foot. The affluent enclave known for its for its stately manses, billionaire residents and sweeping views of the Bay came out on top—where it has likely been for decades.

We thought it would be interesting to take this news and give it a twist by looking at properties on the lower end of the neighborhood’s price range. While multi-million-dollar mansions dominate the zip code, it’s possible to squeeze into the neighborhood for under $1 million by purchasing a one-bedroom condo.

Above, we highlight two of the more affordable properties on the market in Pacific Heights right now. The first is a one-bedroom, one-bathroom top-floor condo that packs a lot of charm into 623 square feet with bay windows, 12-foot ceilings, crown molding and pocket doors separating the dining area and kitchen.

After a recent price cut of $50,000, the property at 1819 Lyon St., No. 3, is on the market for $649,000, and according to Zillow, the least expensive property on the market in Pacific Heights right now.

The second is a two-bedroom, two-bathroom Arts and Crafts-style home at 3157 Jackson St. on the market for $3.5 million. The backyard is spectacular with original landscaping by celebrated Bay Area landscape architect Thomas Church, who’s recognized for introducing the idea of creating living spaces outdoors. 


Article source: http://www.sfgate.com/realestate/article/San-Francisco-real-estate-Pacific-Heights-11129836.php

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