flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

The next boomtown? Construction and redevelopment sizzle in San Diego

Urban Planning

The next boomtown? Construction and redevelopment sizzle in San Diego

Emission-reduction plan could drive influx into downtown


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | January 4, 2016

San Diego's skyline is being transformed by new office, hotel, and residential building projects. Photo courtesy Pixabay

Bosa Development is all in on San Diego. The Vancouver, British Columbia-based developer has been leading the latest construction boom in this southern California market, where Civic San Diego, the downtown planning agency, reports there are more than 63 projects valued at over $6.4 billion being constructed, approved, or under review.

Bosa Development, which completed seven buildings in San Diego over the past 15 years, has another eight buildings planned for construction or redevelopment in the next decade. Last month, Bosa acquired two building sites in downtown San Diego for $42.6 million, on which it plans to build up to 800 condos.

“San Diego is getting ready to pop,” Nat Bosa, the developer’s founder, told the San Diego Union Tribune recently. Indeed, in 2015 alone, developers completed 1,248 apartments, and another 8,106 are in the works, according to Civic San Diego.

Bosa Development was one of the real estate developers behind Rethink Downtown, a free public exhibit that opened last September to highlight the city’s history and culture.

San Diego’s urban core has actually been growing for quite some time. The number of people living downtown almost doubled between the years 2000 and 2013, according to the San Diego Association of Governments.

The city’s construction boom isn’t confined to multifamily, either. The giant retail developer Westfield recently announced plans for its 30-year-old Horton Plaza shopping mall. An adjacent park, which Westfield will manage, is scheduled to open in March, and the developer is considering changes to the mall that range from cosmetic fix-ups to major demolition and replacements.

Last fall, UC San Diego broke ground on a $150 million, 154,000-sf outpatient pavilion that will be build on the university’s health sciences campus in La Jolla, Calif. CO Architects designed the pavilion, which will help serve the Jacobs Medical Center, a $859 million collection of specialty hospitals that opens this year.

All of this construction and redevelopment activity is being conducted against the backdrop of a commitment that San Diego’s Mayor Kevin Faulconer made late last year to cut the city’s carbon emissions in half by 2035. To achieve this goal, the city needs to get more people and businesses to move into established neighborhoods, which will mean greater support for urban housing, an expansion of public transit, and access to renewable energy sources.

Without this commitment, the city might have been facing litigation because its environmental plan lacked sufficient enforcement measures. Faulconer’s plan calls for the city to cut total greenhouse gas emissions 15 percent by 2020 and 49 percent by 2035, based on its emission level from 2010. The plan includes a goal to reach 100% renewable energy by 2035, with an emphasis on local sources, according to Voice of San Diego’s website. And Faulconer envisions more than 60% of San Diego residents walking, riding their bikes, or taking public transit to work by 2035, compared to fewer than 10% in 2010.

Among the construction projects nearing completion in San Diego are a dual-hotel building at Lane Field at the foot of Broadway; a $555.5 million state courthouse, with 22 stories and 71 courtrooms within 704,000 sf, which should be finished this fall; and a 41-story luxury waterfront condo tower called Pacific Gate, another Bosa development that was designed by Kohn Fox Pedersen. Bosa has retained Engel & Völkers Scottsdale to market Pacific Gate, whose condo prices start at $1.4 million.

Related Stories

Architects | Apr 20, 2017

‘Gateways to Chinatown’ project seeks the creation of a new neighborhood landmark for NYC’s Chinatown

The winning team will have $900,000 to design and implement their proposal.

Green | Apr 14, 2017

Sunqiao looks to bring agriculture back to Shanghai’s urban landscape

Vertical farms will bring new farmable space to the city.

Industrial Facilities | Apr 12, 2017

Energizing the neighborhood

The Denny Substation in Seattle is designed to give local residents a reason to visit.

Urban Planning | Apr 3, 2017

Capturing the waterfront draw

People seem to experience a gravitation toward the water’s edge acutely and we traverse concrete and asphalt just to gaze out over an open expanse or to dip our toes in the blue stuff.

Urban Planning | Mar 31, 2017

4 important things to consider when designing streets for people, not just cars

For the most part what you see is streets that have been designed with the car in mind—at a large scale for a fast speed.

Urban Planning | Mar 14, 2017

Denmark-based architecture firm gives China the world’s longest elevated bike path

The Xiamen Bicycle Skyway stretches for 7.6 kilometers throughout the central part of the city.

Urban Planning | Feb 9, 2017

Abandoned WWII-era military village to become 'commune for the 21st century'

The village in Heidelberg, Germany, which 16,000 Americans called home at one time, is being redesigned as a commune for up to 4,000 people.

Green | Feb 6, 2017

A to Z: Seoul’s elevated park features 24,000 alphabetized plants

The plants will represent 250 species found in South Korea.

Urban Planning | Jan 17, 2017

Using 'hidden data' to probe urban problems

The Center for Neighborhood Technology has been tackling poverty, housing, transportation, and environmental issues for four decades.

Architects | Nov 11, 2016

Six finalists selected for London’s Illuminated River competition

The competition is searching for the best design for lighting the bridges of central London.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021