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BTinSF
Jun 10, 2007, 7:02 PM
http://www.sfgate.com/c/pictures/2007/06/10/ba_mint_map.jpg

SAN FRANCISCO
Alleys of transformation
A European-style plaza is emerging from gritty area of Old U.S. Mint

Carl Nolte, Chronicle Staff Writer
Sunday, June 10, 2007

For years, the two alleys that border the Old U.S. Mint in downtown San Francisco were cautionary tales in urban planning as they gradually declined into seediness after the Mint museum closed its doors in 1994.

The little stub of Mint Street, and the block of Jessie Street that runs from Mint into Fifth Street near Mission Street, had nothing but potential. The reality, however, was grim. There were drugs, there were derelicts, there was public urination. The two little alleys were a big mess.

But now, the two streets are being reborn into something called Mint Plaza. Cars have been banned from a block of Jessie, and it will be transformed into a small plaza, like something in Europe, with restaurants, green trees, outdoor dining and a new atmosphere.

Mint Street, which runs off Fifth into Jessie, will get a new look, too -- with new pavement, new parking arrangements, and a cafe or two.

"This is the greatest thing that ever happened around here," said Joey Chait, managing partner of the Provident Loan Association.

Provident is kind of a San Francisco classic, housed in a building faced in white terra-cotta at the corner of Mint and Mission. It had a cameo role in "The Maltese Falcon,'' Dashiell Hammett's famed detective novel.

The little alley complex around the 1874 Old Mint was once one of the brighter corners of Hammett's San Francisco. Hammett himself worked around the corner on Market Street and knew the little alleys well.

Up the street at the corner of Mint and Jessie was a five-story brick candy factory, and next to that, on Jessie, was the San Francisco Fire Department's Station One, the busiest in the city. The firefighters there thought of themselves as elite. "Alley Cats," they called themselves.

The fire station was relocated some years ago. A kind of urban bleakness gradually set in, and the two streets went downhill.

About 1997, the Martin Building Co. started managing various properties in the area -- mostly along Jessie. An old department store warehouse is being converted into offices and residences, and so is the 10-story building over the old firehouse.

People started looking at urban alleys with new eyes. A block or so away, the old Emporium store was turned into a shopping and movie complex. An Intercontinental Hotel is under construction at Fifth and Howard.

The change is dramatic. One Jessie Street building that was covered with graffiti only a year or so ago has a new coat of paint, and some handsome urban apartments were built inside.

The most dramatic change is on the street, where construction on the plaza began May 16.

The idea of a new look for the alleys has been around for years. Why did it take so long?

"Money," said Patrick McNerney, president of Martin Building, "and the political winds."

The whole project is possible under provisions of the state Mello-Roos Act, which allows for the creation of a Community Facilities District. It is a complex undertaking -- the city retains the ownership of the street, but the plaza will be operated by a nonprofit group called Friends of Mint Plaza. The nonprofit will charge fees for temporary use of the facilities.

The total cost of construction is $3.5 million, paid for by the developer.

The trade-off, of course, is that the developer's adjacent property will see values increase because of the plaza.

All of this has gone through the mill of the San Francisco permit process, where the bureaucratic wheels grind exceedingly fine. The Mint Plaza has been approved by the Board of Supervisors and nearly every city regulatory city agency. There were 14 public hearings on the plan. "God," McNerney said, almost to himself, "it's tough to get anything done in this town."

When it is done -- and Labor Day is the target date -- the 18,000-square-foot Mint Plaza will be turned over to the city with the proviso that the nonprofit organization pays for maintenance.

"We want to do something here that will be a part of the city for a hundred years, a special public place that will be part of San Francisco public life," McNerney said.

The centerpiece of the whole block around the alleys is the Old Mint, which the San Francisco Museum and Historical Society hopes to turn into a museum. That project is much grander and more expansive -- one that will cost at least $89 million.

Though the Mint Plaza will be open by September, the Old Mint museum's target date is four years in the future.

"It's a great project," Jim Chappell, president of the San Francisco Planning and Urban Research Association, said of the Mint Plaza. "They are closing the streets and giving them back to the people."

http://www.sfgate.com/c/pictures/2007/06/10/ba_mint_045mac.jpg

http://www.sfgate.com/c/pictures/2007/06/10/ba_mint_087_mac.jpg

E-mail Carl Nolte at cnolte@sfchronicle.com.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/06/10/BAG46QCQFD1.DTL

I went down there a week or two ago--things are looking good.

Gladys8it
Aug 31, 2007, 11:18 PM
I'm so looking foward to all of this happening.

Cheers!!

dimondpark
Sep 1, 2007, 5:22 AM
I like that alley-reminds me of New York.

pseudolus
Sep 1, 2007, 6:33 AM
The alley just a few feet from this one was used in the movie "Rent".

MrMetropolitan
Oct 10, 2007, 7:24 PM
looks mint.

_J_
Oct 12, 2007, 6:37 PM
Exciting! Saw the construction on my way to see Simian Mobile Disco @ the Mezzanine a couple of weeks ago and wondered what was up.

This article's portrayal of grime and abandonment was overdone. I've been going to the Mez for years, and the area isn't that bad. It's actually safer *after* dark due the to club-goer presence---I guess this development will help extend that safety to daylight hours.

Sonofsoma
Oct 21, 2007, 3:22 AM
Very early this morning I drove by Mint Plaza site and saw that the construction fencing has been taken down. The place is looks SHARP. It is CERTAIN to be an immediate hit.

Anyone familiar with the grim, foul-smelling alley that existed there six months ago will marvel at what has been created. Warm. Inviting. Attractive. Beautifully lit at night.

And... it's already turning heads. In this morning's pre-dawn darkness, people stopped to gaze and comment. I heard one woman say to her friend.. "I cant' believe it. It's soooo lovely. The only thing it might be missing is a fireplace.."

May I be one of the first to say THANK YOU! - THANK YOU! to the entire development team for this enormously generous gift to people of San Francisco.

In contrast: Mint Plaza is a private-sector project created for the public. Beautiful, high-quality, constructed quickly and on-time. Once again, the vilified private sector delivers for the citizens of The City.

Can anyone remember when the last time the socialist nut jobs in charge at City Hall successfully delivered a similar project ?

BTinSF
Oct 21, 2007, 5:34 AM
Can anyone remember when the last time the socialist nut jobs in charge at City Hall successfully delivered a similar project ?

Yeah, actually. Not to suggest I don't agree they are "socialist nut jobs" but they did give us both Yerba Buena Gardens and Union Square.

Since I'm out of town for the winter, pictures would be appreciated.

BTinSF
Nov 15, 2007, 7:17 AM
http://www.sfgate.com/c/pictures/2007/11/15/ba_mint_125_mac.jpghttp://www.sfgate.com/c/pictures/2007/11/15/ba_mint_132_mac.jpg

Builder bets newly minted plaza in San Francisco will be an oasis
John King, Chronicle Urban Design Writer
Wednesday, November 14, 2007

The stage is set, and a chic stage it is: Black pavers ripple across a former alleyway with an oak tree on one end, six ginkgoes on the other and a patch of dark spiky grasses in between.

But plazas must be judged by how they function, not how they look - and the artsy design of the Mint Plaza is no guarantee of long-term success.

Instead, the space opening Friday next to San Francisco's Old Mint is a gamble. It's a developer's wager that the landscape south of Market Street will continue to evolve, and a bet that a stylish community is waiting to emerge and stake a claim.

"We're trying to create a little urban neighborhood, a destination within this part of San Francisco," said Patrick McNerny, whose Martin Building Co. spent $3.5 million to transform what was a 300-foot-long stretch of Jessie Street, running west from Fifth Street alongside the long-closed Old Mint.

The plaza's not an act of civic philanthropy: McNerny's firm owns four buildings facing the plaza and another around the corner, all pre-World War II commercial structures that now contain 83 lofts for sale or rent. There's also office space and a nightclub, while three restaurant spaces are being carved out along the plaza.

One restaurant will open next month, an offshoot of Chez Papa from Potrero Hill. Another space is leased to a restaurateur who is still deciding on a theme. The third awaits a tenant. There's also renewed activity across from the plaza behind the Old Mint; Blue Bottle Coffee is set to open after the holidays, planning to replicate the caffeinated scene that defines its alleyway location in Hayes Valley.

McNerny's firm and the new businesses also hope to make live music a weekly occurrence, along with other cultural events and Friday evening block parties.

The plaza will be privately managed but publicly accessible at all hours. It even will offer free Wi-Fi access.

Although workers on Wednesday were fine-tuning the plaza - sealing the pavers and adding benches along the two in-ground planters - the ambience is a change from the Jessie Street of old. For decades the alley was a dingy spillover from Sixth Street, a broad swath of concrete and asphalt where indigents slept or petty criminals dealt drugs. Most automobile traffic involved valet crews ferrying luxury cars to patrons of the shopping mall on the east side of Fifth Street.

So the transformation isn't a simple matter of closing down a street and waiting for patrons to arrive. This isn't the SoMa equivalent of Belden Place, a once-humble alley in the middle of the Financial District that's now filled with seating for eight restaurants. It's on the far edge of Union Square and Yerba Buena Gardens, truly off the beaten path.

For the plaza to succeed, it must be a place that people stroll out of their way to visit - especially because the promised conversion of the Old Mint into a civic museum is at least three years and a $40 million fundraising drive away.

Wisely, the plaza design by CMG Landscape Architecture doesn't try to call attention to itself through fancy fountains or other design pyrotechnics.

The one visual flourish is at Fifth Street, where a statuesque oak tree was trucked in from a nursery in Gilroy and installed as an eye-catching natural accent. Within the plaza, the closest thing to an icon is a long metal arbor that lines up with the converted buildings and tilts back slightly, as if looking up at the Old Mint's thick sandstone walls.

By next summer the arbor should be cloaked in red and orange trumpet vine - the boldest shot of color in a plaza that otherwise is muted.

The plaza also has an ecological tinge. The pavers are gray concrete with a terrazzo-like finish, for instance, but a thin gap between each one allows rainwater to drain into the sandy ground below. As for the half-inch gap that slices across the face of the plaza, from the planter filled with spiked grass to the one that holds the oak, it's a stylish culvert to drain heartier storms.

"Mint Plaza became an exercise in how little we could design, how little was necessary to create a public space," said Willett Moss of CMG. "We want this to be like an Italian piazza. ... You think of those spaces, they have almost nothing in them. It's all about the activity."

Another reason for the low-key approach: the plaza's neighbors. The Old Mint is the obvious landmark - the Greek Revival fortress has been there since 1874 - but the humbler structures are handsome as well. This is how cities used to look, tough and spare with adornments like metal fire escapes to catch the eye.

"The architectural atmosphere is rugged. The scale is strong," Moss said. "We didn't want to infringe, or pretend that we could compete."

The premiere on Friday will be festive, with live music and dancing as well as political speeches and free sparkling wine. The real test lies in the weeks ahead: when days are short and often cold, and the crowd-drawing restaurants have yet to arrive.

McNerny brushes off doubts that the Martin Building investment will pay off.

"I'm very confident," McNerny said. "We're stakeholders here. We know the area. Ten years ago, this wasn't a place where anybody wanted to go - at least not in a positive sense."


E-mail John King at jking@sfchronicle.com.

http://sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?f=/c/a/2007/11/14/BACOT7FHJ.DTL

Downtown Dave
Nov 16, 2007, 12:38 AM
Photos from today. Work is still going on:

The vines can be seen on the still mostly bare trellis.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v106/NelsonAndBronte/SanFrancisco/Random/MintPlaza-0285.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v106/NelsonAndBronte/SanFrancisco/Random/MintPlaza-0291.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v106/NelsonAndBronte/SanFrancisco/Random/MintPlaza-0294.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v106/NelsonAndBronte/SanFrancisco/Random/MintPlaza-0300.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v106/NelsonAndBronte/SanFrancisco/Random/MintPlaza-0312.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v106/NelsonAndBronte/SanFrancisco/Random/MintPlaza-0329.jpg


I really think it will remain a challenge to draw people here until the mint opens up. The area is still full of panhandlers. There is an enormous amount of foot traffic, but I am not sure how many will be tempted to stop.

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v106/NelsonAndBronte/SanFrancisco/Random/MintPlaza-0315.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v106/NelsonAndBronte/SanFrancisco/Random/MintPlaza-0326.jpg

BTinSF
Nov 16, 2007, 3:52 AM
^^^When there are 3 restaurants open, some of them providing al fresco service I'm sure, I think the place will be used. I wouldn't lay odds on the survival of that poor tree, though.

Jerry of San Fran
Nov 22, 2007, 6:59 AM
I reserve judgement till I see it in person, but not too excited about the design. When the plants are established it may look better.

If Chez Papa's new restaurant on the alley is as good as the one on Potrero Hill I will make a bee line to eat there. Definitely indoors though - I do not think that I have ever been in the alley when it was not cold.

krudmonk
Nov 22, 2007, 5:12 PM
I saw this on Channel 2 the other day. It looks great, or it will when it has people. I don't think it has businesses operating there yet, does it? Either way, it's a great conversion. America needs more pedestrian plazas.

BTinSF
Nov 22, 2007, 7:14 PM
By the way, Cafe 36 which is already right around the corner has pretty decent middle eastern sandwiches. It would be nice to get a felafel and take it around the corner to the plaza to eat it on a warm day (which I have, in fact, experienced there).

peanut gallery
Nov 24, 2007, 3:41 AM
I saw it in person a few weeks ago when they were even further away from completion and it looked great even then. Once the restaurants/cafes are in, I think this will be a nice gathering spot.

Downtown Dave
Nov 28, 2007, 12:19 AM
Some scattered chairs make the place a bit more populated today at lunch time:

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v106/NelsonAndBronte/SanFrancisco/Random/MintPlaza-1651.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v106/NelsonAndBronte/SanFrancisco/Random/MintPlaza-1652.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v106/NelsonAndBronte/SanFrancisco/Random/MintPlaza-1660.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v106/NelsonAndBronte/SanFrancisco/Random/MintPlaza-1662.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v106/NelsonAndBronte/SanFrancisco/Random/MintPlaza-1664.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v106/NelsonAndBronte/SanFrancisco/Random/MintPlaza-1657.jpg

http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v106/NelsonAndBronte/SanFrancisco/Random/MintPlaza-1691.jpg