Shifting auction results and median price patterns across the city reveal developers are recalibrating their ambitions—and San Francisco's construction pipeline may be entering a new phase.
As coastal fog lifts on affordability, investors are discovering opportunity west of Twin Peaks, where median prices have climbed 18% in two years—without the hype.
Once overshadowed by Mission District gentrification, the hilltop neighbourhood is attracting savvy landlords and young professionals seeking space, community and reasonable vacancy rates.
As three major mixed-income developments break ground across the city, residents and planners grapple with how affordability mandates are reshaping established communities.
A wave of approvals for mixed-use towers and restored warehouses is transforming the neighbourhood into a magnet for developers and buyers alike, with prices climbing 18% year-on-year.
As tech money floods back into the city, yield-hungry buyers are discovering which neighbourhoods are delivering real rental income—and where the math simply doesn't work.
As vacant lots along Valencia Street and the former industrial zones near 16th transform, affordability advocates and developers face off over what comes next.
Tech sector resurgence and constrained supply are reshaping the market for entry-level buyers, but new state and local incentives are levelling the playing field.
A wave of high-end residential and mixed-use developments is recalibrating the geography of San Francisco's luxury market, with implications far beyond the buildings themselves.
A wave of new residential and mixed-use approvals is transforming the southeastern neighbourhood into a magnet for developers and buyers seeking alternatives to saturated Pacific Heights.