Preparations for the 2442 Diamond Street, San Francisco

Preparations for the 2442 Diamond Street, San Francisco
2442 Diamond Street, Rendering from Stanton Architecture2442 Diamond Street, Rendering from Stanton Architecture

Preliminary permits were submitted for a city house development in the 2442 Diamond Street in the Glen Park district in San Francisco. The project will replace a house with five three -story apartments, including four navals. Sequoia Redwood Living Trust is listed as the owner of property.

2442 Diamond Street Elevation, illustration of Stanton Architecture

2442 Diamond Street Elevation, illustration of Stanton Architecture

The development will include a total of nine apartments, with five units with three bedrooms and four residential units with a bedroom. The application is made by Senate 330 in order to optimize the approval process. With the preliminary application, the developer blocks the provisions of the planning code.

Stanton Architecture is responsible for the design. The project description reports that “every town house has a unique design for the main part of the Diamond Street facade”. The design scheme remained unchanged because the plans were first published for a project review session at the beginning of this year. The illustrations show that every house is equipped with a modern type of windows, two -story loreproof star and flat roofs.

2442 Diamond Street, Isometric view of Stanton Architecture

2442 Diamond Street, Isometric view of Stanton Architecture

The approximately 0.3 hectare plot is located along the Diamond Street between Conrad Street and Moreland Street. The plot of the cliff is located near the district of Diamond Heights, including the Walter Haas playground. Future residents will be less than 15 minutes from Glen Park Bart Station on foot, although the shuttle traffic would change a change of 210 feet.

2442 Diamond Street, picture on Google Street View

2442 Diamond Street, picture on Google Street View

Public records show that the property was last sold in 2001 for almost 1 million US dollars. The estimated costs and the schedule for construction still have to be shared.

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