Multi-Family Housing Proposed At 2083 Ellis Street, San Francisco

2083 Ellis Street View2083 Ellis Street View via DMARC Studio

A preliminary Project Assessment has been filed for a multi-family housing project at 2083 Ellis Street in San Francisco. The project proposal includes the construction of a six-story building housing eleven condominium units. Plans call for the demolition of an existing one-unit residential building.

DMARC Studio is managing the design concepts and construction.

2083 Ellis Street Floor Plans

2083 Ellis Street Floor Plans via DMARC Studio

The project site is a parcel spanning an area of 3,436 square feet. The project will bring eleven dwelling units, designed as a mix of nine two-bedroom and two three-bedroom units. The building will yield a total built-up area of 17,726 square feet. A parking garage for five parking spaces will be designed onsite, and access will be provided at the building’s first floor along Ellis Street.

2083 Ellis Street Section

2083 Ellis Street Section via DMARC Studio

The building facade will rise to a height of 66 feet. Common open spaces measuring 640 square feet and private open spaces of 180 square feet will be planned on the site.

The project requires waivers from the local height limit of 40 feet, reduction of 25 percent rear yard requirement, and elimination of front yard setback. An estimated construction timeline has not been announced yet.

Subscribe to YIMBY’s daily e-mail

Follow YIMBYgram for real-time photo updates
Like YIMBY on Facebook
Follow YIMBY’s Twitter for the latest in YIMBYnews

.

3 Comments on "Multi-Family Housing Proposed At 2083 Ellis Street, San Francisco"

  1. Eliminate parking and add one more 2 bedroom

  2. Gloria Pinto-Obreira | January 14, 2022 at 7:48 pm | Reply

    Old buildings like this, same as old people, are disgusting, racist, and offensive. We need to demolish this and the building next to it NOW and build new modern buildings, with straight lines and right angles and fill it with transient bright shiny new millenial residents. There should be NO parking and in fact it should be a condition of living in this building that you are forbidden from owning a car.

  3. This stick victorian is an important remnant of San Francisco’s architectural heritage. It could easily be restored with extra units that complements the historical architecture. I’m sure that Gloria is joking when defining old buildings and old people. I’m 73 years old and I’m only moderately disgusting.

Leave a comment

Your email address will not be published.


*