UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations UC Berkeley UC Berkeley Electronic Theses and Dissertations Title "Race, Space and Contestation: Gentrification in San Francisco's Latina/o Mission District, 1998-2002 Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/5c84f2hc Author Casique, Francisco Diaz Publication Date 2013 Peer reviewed|Thesis/dissertation eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California Race, Space, and Contestation: Gentrification in San Francisco’s Latina/o Mission District, 1998-2002 By Francisco Diaz Casique A dissertation submitted in partial satisfaction of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in Ethnic Studies in the Graduate Division of the University of California, Berkeley Committee in Charge: Professor Patricia Penn Hilden, Chair Professor José David Saldívar Professor Stephen Small Professor Kim Voss Spring 2013 Abstract “Race, Space, and Contestation: Gentrification in San Francisco’s Latina/o Mission District, 1998-2002” By Francisco Diaz Casique Doctor of Philosophy in Ethnic Studies University of California, Berkeley Professor Patricia Penn Hilden, Chair From 1995 to 2005, the San Francisco Bay Area underwent quick and rapid changes as the forces of the “New Economy,” particularly those connected to internet related businesses, pushed the region’s economic engine at warp speed. San Francisco power brokers recognized the economic power of these new internet related firms and worked to lure and retain this new economic force to and within the city. By 1998, their efforts, along with other forces, created an uneven spatial distribution of internet related firms in San Francisco’s eastern quadrant, a historically working-class area of the city. The encroachment of these internet related firms into eastern quadrant neighborhoods like the Mission District, a working-class and predominantly Latina/o area of the city, also brought gentrification. Between 1998 and 2002, the time focus of this dissertation, the upward trend that the “New Economy” had been experiencing since 1995, hit its peak before falling back to earth. During this same time, the pressures of gentrification that had been impacting Mission District residents since 1995 also hit its peak. Commercial, manufacturing and light-industrial space was being converted apace into office space, live/work lofts, and luxury condominiums. Residential evictions in the Mission District easily outpaced those in other parts of the city during this four year stretch as local real estate firms jumped into speculative real estate deals. The displacement of local industries and people combined contributed to significant residential and commercial shifts in the Mission District. In 1998, Mission District activists and residents formally began an anti-displacement movement. This movement, which found its most potent expression in the working-class Latina/o Mission District before radiating out to other San Francisco neighborhoods, demonstrates the need to understand better the importance of space and place for social movement actors. The Mission District’s claim for spatial and social justice also highlights three key themes for social movement scholarship: collective consumption, cultural identity, and political self- management. In the Mission District these three dimensions showed themselves through a geographic struggle over the protection of livable space, the culturally and racially relevant form of protest within a 1 place based identity formation, and efforts to gain greater community control over city planning processes and decision-making procedures. As much as this dissertation examines a social movement, it also expands on the cultural forms of spatialized and geographically scaled protest activity. The latter two are brought to bear through the resistive efforts of a grassroots led community movement that struggled to create, challenge, and reproduce cultural meanings of place that are absolutely inscribed in our socio-spatial landscape. The close focus of this dissertation on a single community movement within one neighborhood in San Francisco highlights larger issues of concern. How normalized processes such as privatization, and gentrification play out across major urban centers of late capitalist society reveals an intense struggle by those displaced as well as those profiting from the changes. While gentrification may be most visible at the local scale, it would be a mistake to not also understand its connecting threads to larger regional and global forces. As such, viewing gentrification through a multi-scaled lens allows one to view the nuanced impacts of larger global neoliberal tendencies and logics in actually existing places (Brenner & Theodore, 2002). These larger tendencies and logics have made the outcomes of contemporary gentrification – further displacement, dislocation and general marginalization of the urban working-class – a durable part of a larger socio-spatial landscape that for so many produces the interruption and/or destruction of everyday life. This project is situated in larger theoretical issues of organized abandonment, “landscape,” mobility/immobility, and the racialized/spatialized outcomes of short-sighted spatial fixes to crises. This project also demonstrates how these unevenly developed landscapes carry the necessary elements for the creation of spatial justice, and the features necessary for “geographies of justice”, features that extend beyond the local scale, having fluid interplay at varying scales. 2 Table of Contents Table of figures………………………………………………………………………………….iii Acknowledgement……………………………………………………………………………….iv Chapter One: Placing Gentrification and the Mission District .................................................1 Laying the Groundwork ..............................................................................................................1 Local Matters, Spatial Justice and Gentrification .......................................................................7 Gentrification Roots and Branches .............................................................................................8 Placing Spatial Contestation ......................................................................................................16 Methodology .............................................................................................................................23 Chapter Construction .................................................................................................................26 Chapter Two: There’s a Different Mix of People Coming in Now ..........................................28 Santa Clara Version 2.0 .............................................................................................................30 No Reason to Exist ....................................................................................................................32 It Was Happening Totally Invisibly ..........................................................................................34 “Artist Lofts,” Faux Industrial Chic and Voluntary Déclassé ...................................................38 People Who Grew Up Here Can’t Afford to Stay Here ............................................................40 Going FAR to Mask Lofts as Office Space ...............................................................................42 It Increased Exponentially Over the Course of a Few Months .................................................45 Latinos Don’t Utilize Valencia Anymore .................................................................................49 It’s Crazy, Hot, Popular .............................................................................................................51 Conclusion .................................................................................................................................53 Chapter Three: Our First Meetings Were Brown Bag Lunches .............................................54 A New Leadership Takes the Lead ...........................................................................................54 MSROC Leads Into MAC .........................................................................................................59 Brown Bags and Saturday Morning Study Sessions .................................................................64 Conclusion: A Big Upsurge in Consciousness ..........................................................................70 Chapter Four: We Felt Pretty Safe Because the Neighborhood Was So Horrible ................72 Painting a Different Picture .......................................................................................................76 This is Really an Economic and Planning Problem ..................................................................83 This is About to be a Hot Political Issue ...................................................................................86 They Picked the Wrong District to Mess With .........................................................................88 1999 Mayoral Race ...................................................................................................................90 Voting With Their Feet .............................................................................................................92 District Elections .......................................................................................................................96 A Twig in a Current ...................................................................................................................99
Recommended publications
  • LGBTQ America: a Theme Study of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer History Is a Publication of the National Park Foundation and the National Park Service
    Published online 2016 www.nps.gov/subjects/tellingallamericansstories/lgbtqthemestudy.htm LGBTQ America: A Theme Study of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer History is a publication of the National Park Foundation and the National Park Service. We are very grateful for the generous support of the Gill Foundation, which has made this publication possible. The views and conclusions contained in the essays are those of the authors and should not be interpreted as representing the opinions or policies of the U.S. Government. Mention of trade names or commercial products does not constitute their endorsement by the U.S. Government. © 2016 National Park Foundation Washington, DC All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reprinted or reproduced without permission from the publishers. Links (URLs) to websites referenced in this document were accurate at the time of publication. THEMES The chapters in this section take themes as their starting points. They explore different aspects of LGBTQ history and heritage, tying them to specific places across the country. They include examinations of LGBTQ community, civil rights, the law, health, art and artists, commerce, the military, sports and leisure, and sex, love, and relationships. MAKING COMMUNITY: THE PLACES AND15 SPACES OF LGBTQ COLLECTIVE IDENTITY FORMATION Christina B. Hanhardt Introduction In the summer of 2012, posters reading "MORE GRINDR=FEWER GAY BARS” appeared taped to signposts in numerous gay neighborhoods in North America—from Greenwich Village in New York City to Davie Village in Vancouver, Canada.1 The signs expressed a brewing fear: that the popularity of online lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer (LGBTQ) social media—like Grindr, which connects gay men based on proximate location—would soon replace the bricks-and-mortar institutions that had long facilitated LGBTQ community building.
    [Show full text]
  • 21St Annual 80Th Anniversary of SF General Strike
    LaborFest 2014 80th Anniversary of SF General Strike 21st Annual Fighting For Survival July 5 - July 31 From Rockefeller to Tech Titans LABORFEST, P.O.Box 40983, San Francisco, CA 94140, (415) 642-8066 www.laborfest.net, E-mail: [email protected] Welcome to LaborFest 2014 80th Anniversary of San Francisco General Strike and 100th Anniversary of 1914 Ludlow Massacre LaborFest 2014 takes place on the 80th anniversary of core” and testing schemes, all funded by Walmart (Walton the 1934 San Francisco General Strike which included family), the Kipp Foundation (Fischer family, owners of the longshore as well as maritime workers along the entire the GAP), and the Gates Foundation. This is taking place while West Coast. The gains won by the General Strike of ’34 the tech barons are getting tax subsidies while public and are now under attack, including the de- private workers are increasingly squeezed struction of the union hiring hall, the out of the housing market. right to strike and a living wage for all We will also have our annual labor mar- workers. itime boat trip with historian and trade 2014 is also the 100th anniversary of unionists, who will discuss the history of the Ludlow miners’ massacre in Lud- the development of the Bay Area. We will low, Colorado. The mine owner, John tour the newly constructed eastern span D. Rockefeller, ordered gun-wield- of the San Francisco Bay Bridge that was ing company thugs and the Colorado built with 100% union labor. Thirty-three National Guard to burn out and kill 1934 SF General Strike - by Hayden workers died during the building of the the striking miners and their families.
    [Show full text]
  • Landmark Designation Work Program HEARING DATE: DECEMBER 15, 2010
    Executive Summary Landmark Designation Work Program HEARING DATE: DECEMBER 15, 2010 Date: December 8, 2010 Case No.: 2010.2776 Staff Contact: Mary Brown – (415) 575‐9074 [email protected] Reviewed By: Tim Frye – (415) 575‐6822 [email protected] REQUESTED COMMISSION ACTION This informational presentation to the Historic Preservation Commission (HPC) is intended to inform and guide prioritization of the HPC’s Landmark Designation Work Program (Work Program) for FY2010‐2011. There is no action required at this time. Based on the discussion at the December 15, 2010 hearing, the Planning Department (Department) will return with recommendations at the January 19, 2011 HPC hearing. PROJECT BACKGROUND At its August 4, 2010 hearing the HPC directed Department staff to provide background information on Article 10 Landmark designations to date and identify, if any, trends related to the location, property types, social history, and construction dates of existing Landmarks. While there are no specific Landmark designation criteria outlined in Article 10 of the Planning Code, the HPC was also interested in designations that were made primarily for a property’s association with a significant person, event, or cultural group, rather than solely its architectural qualities. It is the Department’s understanding that the analysis contained in this report will be used to inform and prioritize the HPC’s Landmark Designation Work Program (Work Program) for FY2010‐2011. The budget for this fiscal year allocates one full‐time equivalent (FTE) staff to Landmark designation and other related activities as directed by the HPC. Given the number of eligible resources identified in recent surveys and in past Landmark Preservation Advisory Board work programs, and the workload associated with each designation, staffing for only a limited number of designations is feasible.
    [Show full text]
  • Ordinance Designating 2926-294816Th Street, the Labor Temple/Redstone Building, As 4 Landmark No
    FILE NO. 031832 ORDINANCE NO. 10 -04 1 (Ordinance to Designate 2926.294816th Street, the Labor Temple/Redstone Building, As a Landmark Under Plànning Code Article 10.) 2 3 Ordinance Designating 2926-294816th Street, the Labor Temple/Redstone Building, As 4 Landmark No. 238 Pursuant To Article 10, Sections 1004 And 1004.4 Of The Planning 5 Code. 6 Note: Additions are sinflle-underline italics Times New Roman; 7 deletions are s/R.'cethr8blgh italics Times .Vcw Reman. Board amendment additions are douQle underlined. 8 Board amendment deletions are strikothrough normaL. 9 Be it ordained by the People of the City and County of San Francisco: 10 Section 1. Findings: 11 The Board of Supervisors hereby finds that 2926-2948 16th Street, the Labor Temple / 12 Redstone Building, Lot 14 in Assessors Block 3553, has a special character and special 13 historical, architectural and aesthetic interest and value, and that its designation as a 14 Landmark will further the purposes of, and conform to the standards set forth in Article 10 of 15 the City Planning Code. 16 (a) Desianation: Pursuant to Section 1004 of the City Planning Code, 2926.2948 17 16th Street, the Labor Temple I Redstone Building, is hereby designated as Landmark No. 18 238. This designation has been fully approved by Resolution No. 563 of the Landmarks 19 Preservation Advisory Board and Resolution No. 16638 of the Planning Commission, which 20 Resolutions are on file with the Clerk of the Board of Supervisors under File No. 031832 21 and which Resolutions are incorporated herein and made part hereof as t~ough fully set forth.
    [Show full text]
  • Roxie Theatre 8 7/10 Carol Tarlen Lives!
    2009 LaborFest 16th Annual ‘34‘34 GeneralGeneral Strike, Strike, July 2 - July 31 7575 Years Years and and The Struggle Struggle ContinuesContinues Welcome to LaborFest 2009 LaborFest was established in 1994 to commemorate the the Golden Gate Bridge. San Francisco General Strike and West Coast Waterfront Under the first Public Works of Art Project, the first strike. This year is the 75th anniversary of these historic New Deal federal program, artists were at work at Coit events for working people. 1934 was a tumultuous year Tower painting the murals of the people of California, for labor in San Francisco and the United States. Like the very same month as the General Strike. These mu- today, millions were unemployed and workers had giv- rals, like the Coit Tower murals of Anton Refregier en up waiting for things to get better on their own. and his assistant Louise Gilbert, came under a vicious Workers, including longshore workers, began to orga- political attack for including the working class strug- nize for direct action, and that meant organizing to shut gles of not only the San Francisco General Strike but down the docks of San Francisco when they were forced also of labor history. Fortunately, although there was out on strike. They burned their company “blue books”; some censorship, these and other murals have survived they broke from the corrupt ILA which was based on the and are now a permanent link to the history of working East Coast and they went people. on strike for a union con- We will also be com- trolled hiring hall that memorating the 90th would end the shape- anniversary of the im- up.
    [Show full text]
  • Theatre Rhinoceros Records, 1968-2009, Bulk 1981-2001
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/c8n29z94 No online items Finding Aid to the Theatre Rhinoceros Records, 1968-2009, bulk 1981-2001 Finding Aid written by Dean Smith The Bancroft Library University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California, 94720-6000 Phone: (510) 642-6481 Fax: (510) 642-7589 Email: [email protected] URL: http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/ © 2007 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Finding Aid to the Theatre BANC MSS 2003/126 c 1 Rhinoceros Records, 1968-2009, bulk 1981-2001 Finding Aid to the Theatre Rhinoceros Records, 1968-2009, bulk 1981-2001 Collection Number: BANC MSS 2003/126 c The Bancroft Library University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California Finding Aid Written By: Dean Smith Date Completed: July 2013 © 2013 The Regents of the University of California. All rights reserved. Collection Summary Collection Title: Theatre Rhinoceros records Date (inclusive): 1968-2009, Date (bulk): bulk 1981-2001 Collection Number: BANC MSS 2003/126 c Creators : Theatre Rhinoceros (San Francisco, Calif.) Extent: Number of containers: 26 cartons, 1 box and 2 oversize foldersLinear feet: 33 Repository: The Bancroft Library University of California, Berkeley Berkeley, California, 94720-6000 Phone: (510) 642-6481 Fax: (510) 642-7589 Email: [email protected] URL: http://bancroft.berkeley.edu/ Abstract: The Theatre Rhinoceros records consist of Production files: materials related to productions, co-productions, benefits, proposed productions, theatre rental, award ceremonies,
    [Show full text]
  • 2015-000988CWP Staff Contact: Claudia Flores, Project Manager [email protected], (415) 558-6473 Reviewed By: Gil Kelley, Director of Citywide Planning
    Executive Summary Mission 2015 Interim Controls HEARING DATE: AUGUST 6, 2015 Project Name: Mission 2015 Interim Controls related to the Mission Action Plan 2020 Case No.: 2015-000988CWP Staff Contact: Claudia Flores, Project Manager [email protected], (415) 558-6473 Reviewed by: Gil Kelley, Director of Citywide Planning [email protected], (415) 575-9115 Recommendation: Adopt an Interim Policy and Postpone Adoption of Interim Controls On July 9, 2015 the Planning Commission adopted a Resolution to Initiate Interim Controls in the Mission District. Subsequent to the Commission’s July 9th initiation action, notice of the approval hearing was published, as required by the Planning Code. On July 23, 2015 the Planning Commission held an informational hearing to consider alternatives to modify the proposed controls and scheduled potential action on the item for today’s hearing – August 6. This case report includes the following information: 1) a summary of potential changes to the interim controls published on July 9, based on public and Commissioner comments, should the Commission wish to proceed with adoption; 2) a resolution for an interim policy for consideration for adoption by the Commission; and 3) recommendation for action and next steps. INTERIM CONTROLS Per Planning Code Section 306.7, interim zoning controls may be imposed by either the Planning Commission or the Board of Supervisors during or preceding a period of study when it is necessary “to ensure that the legislative scheme which may be ultimately adopted is not undermined during the planning and legislative process by the approval or issuance of permits authorizing the alteration, construction or demolition of buildings or the establishment or change of uses which will conflict with that scheme”.
    [Show full text]
  • 2016 Booklet
    LaborFest 23rd Annual 2016 July 2 - July 31 Workers’ Survival, Resistance and Power in the 21st Century LABORFEST, P.O.Box 40983, San Francisco, CA 94140, (415) 642-8066 www.laborfest.net, E-mail: [email protected] Welcome to LaborFest 2016 Workers’ Survival, Resistance and Power in the 21st Century This year marks the 82nd anniversary of the San Francisco Warren K. Billings. This event was used to attack unions General Strike and West Coast Maritime Strike. The Gener- and all working people. After a struggle of decades, al Strike was not only a victory for the ILWU longshoreman Mooney and Billings were finally released from prison, but also for hundreds of thousands of workers who joined yet this incident is virtually unknown in San Francisco. unions from hotel workers and clerical workers to public This year is also the 70th anniversary of the Oakland workers. General Strike which was the last general strike in the Today, unions and working people are under attack. Work- United States, and LaborFest will have a walk and forum ers’ real incomes have been declining from wage freezes, on the lessons today from that strike. outsourcing, deregulation and pri- As in 1946 when that strike took vatization during the past 30 years. place, workers were bullied, re- The use of technology has not taliated against and fired for shortened our workweek but made wanting to have a union. We more and more workers part time face the same fight today as tens and temporary who do gig jobs to of thousands of workers at Wal- survive.
    [Show full text]
  • Attachment D
    Attachment D DPR Forms and Historic Evaluation Sheets State of California ⎯ The Resources Agency Primary # DEPARTMENT OF PARKS AND RECREATION HRI# CONTINUATION SHEET Trinomial Page 1 of Several *Resource Name or # (Assigned by recorder) See attached pages *Recorded by: Matt Weintraub, San Francisco Planning Dept. *Date: April 2011 Continuation ⌧ Update *NRHP Status Code (Update): 3CS (CHRSC) This property is assigned a California Historical Resource Status Codes (CHRSC) rating of “3CS – Appears eligible for CR as an individual property through survey evaluation”. This CHRSC rating supercedes the previously adopted CHRSC rating that is indicated on the attached previously completed survey form. The previously adopted CHRSC rating was assigned using limited research and information. Since that time, additional research and information-gathering has been conducted that provides a more complete perspective of properties that meet eligibility standards for federal and State registers as individual historic resources and/or as historic district contributors, of areas that qualify for consideration as historic districts, and of properties that do not qualify for historic status. Consequently, the previously adopted findings of the Inner Mission North Survey have been revised in the following ways: 1) The areas that were previously designated as the Mission Reconstruction Historic District and the Inner Mission Commercial Corridor Historic District were reevaluated as thematic geographic areas, which contain individual historic buildings and historic districts that are related to the thematic contexts, but that do not constitute historic districts in and of themselves. The previous documentation for these areas did not include finite boundaries or fully defined contributing components, which are necessary components of historic districts.
    [Show full text]
  • San Francisco Ephemera Collection SF SUB COLL
    http://oac.cdlib.org/findaid/ark:/13030/kt2p30342b No online items Finding Aid to the San Francisco Ephemera Collection SF SUB COLL Finding aid prepared by David Krah, Stephanie Walls, and California Ephemera Project staff; updated by San Francisco History Center staff. The California Ephemera Project was funded by a Cataloging Hidden Special Collections and Archives grant from the Council on Library and Information Resources in 2009-2010. San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library 100 Larkin Street San Francisco, CA 94102 [email protected] URL: http://www.sfpl.org/sfhistory 2010, revised January 2020 Finding Aid to the San Francisco SF SUB COLL 1 Ephemera Collection SF SUB COLL Title: San Francisco ephemera collection Date (inclusive): 1850-present Identifier/Call Number: SF SUB COLL Physical Description: 265.0 Linear feet(in 153 file drawers) Contributing Institution: San Francisco History Center, San Francisco Public Library 100 Larkin Street San Francisco, CA 94102 415-557-4567 [email protected] URL: http://sfpl.org/sfhistory Abstract: Consists of ephemeral materials, city records and clippings relating to the city of San Francisco and its citizens. Materials date from the 1850s to the present, the bulk from the 20th century. Subjects cover a diverse array of San Francisco history and primarily pertain to: municipal government; city planning; urban policy; environmental engineering; transportation; social history; labor history; community relations; notable events; public events, fairs and celebrations; and various aspects of local popular culture. Subjects also relate to specific local entities, such as: businesses; schools, colleges and universities; political parties; and associations, groups and clubs.
    [Show full text]
  • Gray Panthers of SF Nonprofit Org
    GRAY PANTHERS OF SAN FRANCISCO June Meeting Trapped in the Two-Party System Tuesday, June 17, 12:30 –3PM Unitarian Universalist Center 1187 Franklin @ Geary GRAY PANTHERS COMMITTEE MEETINGS & EVENTS All meetings and events take place at 2940 16th St, Rm 200-4, unless otherwise noted. Board Meeting Wed, June 4, 12:30 PM, in our office. Book Club Monday, June 30, Café, 142 McAllister, between Hyde/Leavenworth Newsletter Committee, Thurs, June 5, noon, in our office. Mark your calendar, Wed, July 30, for Medicare 49th Anniversary! Join the campaign! - Save It - Improve it - Expand it to cover everyone! 4:00 PM: Rally at Social Security Office, Valencia at 22nd St. 4:30 PM across the street: Launch of SF Campaign for Medicare for All! May Meeting Let’s Talk About Alternatives June Meeting Roma Guy, of Tax Payers for Public Safety, gave a complete overview of the strategy and activism Say you can’t get no satisfaction…even living to redirect $620 million from building a new jail with Democrats in control of the City and Sacra- in SF to alternatives. Two of the six SF County mento! Who’s really in control? How can we take jails are unsafe or closed; the remaining CJ1 is a back the power? holding cell and CJ2 has 1,200 mixed prisoners including transgenders. There are about 1,200 to Come to our June meeting to talk about the latest 1,300 empty beds in the SF jail and the crime rate election results and how we might go where no is decreasing.
    [Show full text]
  • Inner Mission North 1853-1943 Context Statement, 2005
    INNER MISSION NORTH 1853-1943 CONTEXT STATEMENT, 2005 The activity which is the subject of this Cultural Resources Survey has been financed in part with federal funds from the National Park Service, Department of the Interior, through the California Office of Historic Preservation. However, the contents and opinions do not necessarily reflect the views or policies of the Department of the Interior or the California Office of Historic Preservation, nor does mention of trade names or commercial products constitute endorsement or recommendation by the Department of the Interior or the California Office of Historic Preservation. October 2001 – September 2005 Prepared by: San Francisco Planning Department ACKNOWLEDGEMENT Mayor Gavin Newsom Landmarks Preservation Advisory Board Planning Department Lily Chan Dean Macris, Director of Planning Robert W. Cherny Neil Hart, Chief of Neighborhood Planning Courtney Damkroger Mark Luellen, Preservation Coordinator Ina Dearman N. Moses Corrette, Planning staff M. Bridget Maley, President Alan Martinez Thanks also to: Laura Ajello, Rachel Force, Suheil Shatara Amber Grady, Christine Nelson, Jeffrey Johanna Street Tully, Gary Oatey, Edgar Oropeza, and Robert Thomson Survey Advisory Committee Catherine Bauman Planning Department (retired) Charles Chase San Francisco Architectural Heritage Rick Cooper Planning Department Courtney Damkroger Landmarks Preservation Advisory Board Neil Hart Planning Department Tim Kelley Historian Jeremy Kotas Architect M. Bridget Maley Architectural Resources Group, Landmarks
    [Show full text]