After years of delay, concern about toxic cleanup, S.F. s big Shipyard development gets moving again
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Troy Wilson, a realtor, runs at San Francisco s biggest housing development, the Shipyard, on Wednesday, January 27, 2021, in San Francisco, Calif. He moved into a condo there last year.Photos by Yalonda M. James / The Chronicle
From the window in his Shipyard condominium, Dean Talanehzar likes to sit and watch the backhoes and bulldozers pushing dirt around for the next phase of San Francisco’s biggest development project.
While the coming building won’t be particularly big 77 units out of 12,000 planned on a former Navy base and nearby Candlestick Point he is heartened because the developer is bullish enough to keep working despite the pandemic and the unresolved toxic cleanup issues in the surrounding parcels.
FAIRFIELD-SUISUN, CALIFORNIA
After years of delay, concern about toxic cleanup, S.F.’s big Shipyard development gets moving again [San Francisco Chronicle]
Feb. 2 From the window in his Shipyard condominium, Dean Talanehzar likes to sit and watch the backhoes and bulldozers pushing dirt around for the next phase of San Francisco’s biggest development project.
While the coming building won’t be particularly big 77 units out of 12,000 planned on a former Navy base and nearby Candlestick Point he is heartened because the developer is bullish enough to keep working despite the pandemic and the unresolved toxic cleanup issues in the surrounding parcels.