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tv   [untitled]    May 6, 2011 10:30am-11:00am PDT

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steps -- and yerba buena island and touch briefly on the steps before the item is approved on april 21. with respect to the re- development program, we were last before you in february of last year when we brought forward the exclusive negotiating agreement for the construction of a waste-water treatment facility. we gave you a presentation and then that looked at this as a development program which has changed since 2006, essentially upsizing development to 8000 residential units. the project largely remains the same. the cornerstones of the project remain largely the same. they are based on achieving the highest level of sustainability.
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creating a new san francisco neighborhood -- there are 300 acres of parks and open space that are meant to be regionally- serving. also existing and future residents are serving as a connection to the larger reason, and finally, the suite of community benefits for public facilities such as the waste water treatment plant, a new fire station, and an entirely new infrastructure system we will walk through with you today. this is a detailed breakdown of the development program that was analyzed under the eir. the ceqa findings in need -- in the mnrp -- approximately up to
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500 hotel rooms, 12,000 square feet to be used. approximately 20,000 square feet for historic structures. and as i mentioned, parks and open spaces. so treasure island and yerba buena were originally constructed in 1937 as a works projects. treasure island is a 400-acre man-made island. the navy built the island in increments, so the infrastructure is tied together -- what is the best word? not the most rational layout. entirely new infrastructure systems will need to be provided before any development takes place. in addition to the wet/dry
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utility, there is approximately $140 million retrofit program and the possibility -- to guard against the possibility of tsunami. we will touch on that in the presentation. of the 450 acres, the treasure island development authority will receive all of treasure island, with the exception of -- this is not working right now, but -- let's see. this shaded area here outlined in red is outlined by the department of labor as the job corps vocational training program. that would remain under federal jurisdiction. on the south side of your blenheim islands -- your but when i went -- yerba buena island. basically all the structures
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that are out there would be constructed as new facilities, new infrastructure systems being put in place, new residential and commercial uses. there are approximately 800 residential units there today. there is a transitional housing system to allow residents to move into new units as they become available. they are reading out from the -- radiating out of the island core. this is a very compact land development footprint. bus service provided by muni to san francisco and transit service to the east bay. this allows a couple of different things. three primarily i would like to touch down. 60% of all residents within a 5 to 10 minute walk of the transit.
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we're trying to get people out of their cars for their daily trip on and off the island and create a pedestrian-friendly environment, to incentivize folks who use transit and to leave their cars at home. it also allows for the delivery of very efficient infrastructure system. we are only building on 100 acres of the 400 acres on treasure island. it allows for a much more efficient network of dry and wet utility systems and allows the development of two-thirds of the island as public parks. a wide variety of programs for open space. a large portion is dedicated to infrastructure and systems and landscape architecture. we will talk about some of the measures that have been integrated to address the water treatment. with respect to sustainability,
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back in 2006, working with the department of the environment, the staff came up with the first sustainability plan for a project in san francisco. we updated that in 2011. that would be one of the final approval actions that the title board would take and the board of supervisors would be adopting the plan. there are obligations that would ensure the responsibilities of treasure island community development as the community developer. so, at the master plan level, we have committed to achieving neighborhood development at a bold certification. -- gold certification. we are working with developers to achieve that," certification.
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-- highest cert. they selected 16 blocks across the globe that had the potential to achieve carbon neutrality. we are working with the folks at u.s. green building council and the climate initiative on developing a roadmap to get to that -- end state is probably not be right word, but carbon neutrality, carbon positive state sometime in the future. on the building level, there has been a switch. in 2006, the sustainability plan contains green building specifications that pertains specifically to treasure island that would be requirements for all new construction. since that time, the city has adopted a green building
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ordinance, so we will be complying with that. in addition, there are green building specifications that go above and beyond that ordinance. again, all new construction will be required to comply with this. so, they are attached to our design for development. that, again, though -- would be the responsible of treasure island as well as any future developer. and our approach to sustainability has been recognized on the local level, state level, nationally by the aia, and through our participation in the clean climate initiative. we have set a lot of goals. a lot of what we're trying to achieve will wrists -- will necessitate the partnership of the puc.
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so, with that, i will turn it over to the details engineer to walk you through the infrastructure system. >> commissioner torres? commissioner torres: yes, a few questions, if i may. the project calls for 18,000 units? >> yes. commissioner torres: are they rental or ownership? >> i believe the split is 90 for sale and 10 rental. commissioner torres: and the variants of size, bedroom-wise? >> on average, two-bedroom. the our family friendly. it depends on the product tuck. there are some townhomes that are higher in. the townhomes on your blenheim -- yerba buena island are 1
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million to one. then you have the units on mission bay. commissioner torres: [unintelligible] >> of about 30% of the total development program would be affordable. that is one of the things i probably should have started off with. with respect to the government's proposal to eliminate redevelopment agencies and the power to capture that tax increment, we are shifting to an infrastructure financing district model. what that means is -- >> -- commissioner torres: where has that worked before? >> there is one unit being created. there is state law on the books. they are basically backstop of the same tax revenue pledge --
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commissioner torres: and that would provide for the affordable housing? but the law only allows revenues to be used for replacement -- >> the lot only allows revenues to be used for replacement housing obligations. so, essentially, we have 65 cents on the $1 available for the projects, whereas we budgeted for 80 cents. we have had to make policy decisions as to how we deliver the project. our decision was to reduce the level of affordable housing to 25%. the may planting decisions of the board of supervisors in the planning commission on various options for delivering the project. that is currently the staff recommendation. commissioner torres: i have only lived here since 1996, but i have seen a trend of movement of the middle class outside of san francisco. is there going to be announced here to reach out to that group
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of folks who are basically working-class folks, to be able to afford housing within the city, at least within the city boundaries? >> one of the options we are looking at is to reduce the requirement for inclusionary housing to zero is currently 5%. in recognition that we want to attract work force in time -- income households, we want to preserve that level to create the widest possible spectrum of housing. commissioner torres: 29,000,004 facilities and amenities. what does that mean? -- $29 million for facilities and amenities. >> we will develop a school for a k-8 facility. there is $14 million for a combined police and fire station. commissioner torres: those are
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community facilities. fire stations, schools. >> we just do not think we have a large enough population -- ultimately the school districts will make this determination. commissioner torres: right. the historic rehabs clause -- is that for the buildings on yerba buena only? >> there are three buildings on treasure island that were built by the navy. commissioner torres: are they going to be rented out like we do with presidio? >> that is the plan. if the project builds up, that would be the intent. commissioner torres: so we have oversight of the whole project? >> exactly. our office is the project management entity for the treasure island -- commissioner torres: private
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sector? >> no, we are the public sector. commissioner torres: who is the private? >> we have a public-private partnership. we would get the land from the navy. we would enter the development. this is a development with them. they would make the improvements, have the rights to sell to home builders to come in and do construction. commissioner torres: thank you. >> [unintelligible] >> it is a 50/50 partnership between lennar, kenwood, and stockbridge capital. >> i just have one comment, in vacant probably be addressed in the next presentation about climate change and how low-lying treasure island is. i am hoping we can really
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address that and talk really concretely about adaptations. there is the tsunami issue. it is a little bit more of an on gnome. it is much more of unknown. -- a known. >> it is dealt with in the plan and the eir. we can talk to that. >> great. thank you. >> hello again. i will run through quickly some of the highlights in the construction plan, take any climate change questions you have. commissioner torres: excuse me. who are you? >> bks engineers. just starting off quickly -- as michael mentioned, some of the
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cost. $140 million for technical stabilization on the islands. i want to go through what that means. $123 million in infrastructure costs and utilities. replacing all the existing utilities that are out there today. so, starting with the geotechnical stabilization, the two islands are different in what their soils are like. yei -- yvi, there are local landslides that have to be fixed, but nothing of great significance. turning to treasure island, very different soil. the soil consists of dread sand over sandy shoals and what is referred to -- the navy filled
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in this area, creating the flat area. the two primary concerns are the sand layers and the settlement of the young bay mud. those two settlement issues are a big concern with construction and development on the island. for the approach, week mitigate that. -- we mitigate that. ngo reviewed this with a panel consisting of four world wide experts in the geotechnical field. there are two different types of medication. to start with, the sand identified throughout the development is defined by dynamic compaction and vib rocompaction. it simulates an earthquake.
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it can pack bill ayers. the compression of the bay mud then is done by loading a bunch of soil that creates a great deal of bay mud over time. both of those together create a disabled platform for the construction of the buildings and utility and researcher. the yellow area is where the dynamic impaction would take place, under all the new developments. on the perimeter, the vibrocompaction, to create a stable shoreline along the edge. president vietor: so, are you seeing the center of the island is not going to be stabilized? >> the open space areas -- there are no utilities out there in
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those areas. there is no reason to worry about liquefaction and an earthquake. >> what about kids playing soccer some afternoon? >> liquefaction -- the crown settles, but it is not a catastrophic -- the ground settles, but it is not a cass strophic event. you might give boiling of water. >> and dynamic compaction. i assume there is an environmental impact report. what would happen to the bay creatures? i would imagine if he made a loud noise -- he made it sound like it was an earthquake simulation. >> it is really no worse than a pile driving operation. it is not a loud noise at all.
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so, once we go through those two concepts -- [laughter] once we go through those two procedures, of be anticipate losing two to 3 feet of elevation. we will have to bring soil in to bring that up to development grade. i will go into that in a moment. just over 1 million cubic yards will be imported. >> foreign alta to -- for an altitude increase of how much? >> i will get into that. we anticipate that buildings from six stories to 10 stories can be built on conventional foundations. they will not to have -- they will not have to have a pile driving. the taller ones will have to have piled foundations. >> i want to point out -- in the
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upper left-hand corner, the waste water treatment plant, the replacement would in theory be in the purple area. >> we will identify those areas. we are going to contemplate were that would be in that corner. >> in the infrastructure plan, there would be a requirement that that has to be delivered to the puc with the same du technical specs -- geotechnical specs? president vietor: has this dynamic compaction and done in other places? >> yes. it is pretty common along the area, actually. so, moving -- the protection
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against sea level rise. it has varied over the past 10 years or so. the current direction from the state for planning purposes is 16 inches to 55 inches by the beginning of 2100. we do not necessarily rely on the projected amount of sea level rise. we tried to build a project that can be adapted overtime moving forward. any new development area, shown in green, -- in the new development area, shown in green, there are the areas adapted to sea level rise. the areas on the perimeter of the island, it is not a levee- protected environment. we need to protect ourselves from waves. we've taken the perimeter and figured out what the elevation seems to be, taking in account tsunami is, storm events, and
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added 16 inches to the protection. then we have enough room around the island in order to adapt the perimeter over time as more and more information is available. we can adjust that perimeter area to protect. 50 years up, we can then understand what the sea level rise is going to be increate that perimeter protection -- and create that perimeter protection. commissioner torres: is this area vulnerable to a potential tsunami? >> no. it is protected by the golden gate. we can get into a lot of detail about tsunamis. commissioner torres: so, you're perimeter that you articulated would take care of that? >> yes. president vietor: you just said
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55 inches by 2100. we are anticipating a minimum of a 55-inch sea level rise. and 36-inches -- you are going to raise the development by 16 inches? >> right. the ability then is to adjust the perimeter of the islands to protect ourselves from additional sea level rise beyond 36 inches. it will also create a funding mechanism to generate money over time to pay for that construction as it is needed in 50 or 100 years. president vietor: why wouldn't we do that now? >> it is an adaptive strategy. the predictions are an upper scale up sea level -- of sea level rising, and it does not fit that s -- curve.
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commissioner torres: this is over 100 years? >> this is over 100 years. it gives us the ability to adjust and to generate the funds to just over time. president vietor: and that is all factored into the budget and in 100-year plan? >> correct. >> do you make today's residents pay for it forever? you are asking to pay for a reasonable future, but then they pay for it as it continues to grow. >> pc level rise predictions are actually less. if we change, we have to cope less. we will spend the capital where it is not needed. if it is more, we can accommodate the additional sea level rise. commissioner torres: if i may,
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what benefit is it to the ratepayers that we provide these protections? >> i do not quite understand the question. commissioner torres: are we going to ensure that we have a minimum of 16 inches for the project? to what benefit are all those improvements? >> most of the cost the gentleman was talking about is the developers' costs. >> there will be a funding mechanism that will be in place that raises money over time under development to pay for that infrastructure. commissioner torres: so, these will not be borne by the ratepayers of sand and cisco? >> correct.
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they have the benefit we have of being able to raise the island by 3 feet for a storm system today. it will eliminate the pump stations that necessary to get water off of the island. after 16 inches of sea level rise, we will need to adjust. that is what the project pays for. president vietor: and the project will pay for it? >> correct. >> there will be a shared cost. there are certain things we are paying for. we can talk about that. we would pay for the waste water treatment plant. but the infrastructure to deliver the water there is a mixed cost. we can go through details. >> pc level question -- he would not be paying for those -- the
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ec level question, he would not be paying for those. vice president moran: we would be talking about the cost of the waste water treatment plant? >> for certain items on there. there will be a number of rate increases over the next 10 years to pay for residents in the southeast, for example, that provides no benefit to treasure island. if treasure island was paying these benefits for the mainland, there are no benefits. in some ways, if you were not saving it ratepayer money, treasure island would be subsidizing the mainland. vice president moran: it is not
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fair for treasure island to be bearing the cost, right? >> if you at 8000 units, plus the hotels -- if the waste water treatment plant comes in at the numbers we are looking at, it is about the same cost for those people as the people living in san francisco bay. and we can walk through those numbers with here. vice president moran: what hotels are going to be there? having made a decision yet? >> i do not think so. vice president moran: there would be two hotels. one with 50 rooms. another with 450 grams. >> we've not entered any agreements with developers. vice president moran: in that situation, does that ratepayer pay for part of the incentive as well? >> everyone on the island should be paying for th