By Bruce B. Brugmann
Several folks pointed out to me that the San Francisco Chronicle carried a premature comment on my death, in its Aug. 9th feature "What people say about the designs (of our new towering highrise buildings)."
It quoted Michael S. McGill, the former executive director of the San Francisco Urban Planning & Research Association and former executive director of the Bay Area Forum, 64, now living in Washington, D.C.
Said Gill, "Having left SF at the end of the two-decade war over high-rises, in the early '90s, I am astonished at the apparent public support for 'the tallest high-rise on the West Coast.' How things have changed! Is (San Francisco Bay Guardian publisher) Bruce Brugmann still alive, or is he spinning in his grave?"
Hey, Mike, good to hear from you. Your report of my death is premature and I am happy to report that the Guardian
is still firmly on top of the highrise issue, which I like to call pellmell Manhattanization. We stopped the first highrise boom with Proposition M, the limited growth initiative on commercial highrises and the downtown highrise boom.
But now the issue is highrises with million-dollar condos, ugly, much too high and out of proportion for a compact city and its compact neighborhoods, built not for residents but for people working outside the city and driving out our lower income and middle classes.
You can rest assured, Mike, that we are on the story and fighting them every way we can. And soon you may see the equivalent of a Prop M for highrise condos. Can we count on you to come back and join the battle?
Postscript: "The Devil's Bargain at the Transbay Terminal," a blog by Guardian Executive Editor Tim Redmond, eloquently summarizes the key political point behind the new highrise boom. "Nobody in California wants to pay higher taxes for anything. So the folks at City Hall have decided that the only way we can have a new transit terminal is if we hock a piece of our city and our skyline to fund it. So we take some of the land on the terminal site and let a developer build monstrosity of a highrise on it--and that will bring in the money that we can't get any other way."
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Comments (1)
DALY OUT. AHIMSA FOR MAYOR.
Now that the last Great White Male Hope has left the ring to fight another day (thanks Chris), I hope that at least the progressive establishment in this city will finally acknowledge and respect that there is a strong, smart, comitted very Progressive Black Woman running for Mayor. Her name is Dr. AHIMSA SUMCHAI. C'mon guys, talk with her, she won't bite, well maybe a little. And let's face it, right now you got nothing - so you got nothing to loose.
(NOT approved by official campaign)
If you want a sneak peak of the future the city father mo-fo's have planned for us, i suggest you sit on the little bench at the top of Dolores Park and contemplate. Beautiful, wasn't it. Except for that monstrosity that sits there temporarily in conspicuous isolation. Like a giant finger being flipped at us all by the politikos and their rapacious spekulator paymasters. In five years, if they have their wicked way, there will be a wall of highrises blocking the view out across the bay, even from that reasonably elevated location. Is that what we want ? Just asking.
Patrick Monk.RN. Noe Valley.
AHIMSA FOR MAYOR
THE ONLY WAY TO FLY.
PRESS CONFERENCE
TODAY.
Friday 10th.
NOON.
CITY HALL
RIGHT THE WRONGS
STOP THE ROT
TAKE BACK THE DOME
Posted by patmonk
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August 10, 2007 08:55 AM