More homes coming to Seeno’s San Marco development

A Concord developer’s plan to build 206 single-family homes instead of apartments or townhomes in Pittsburg’s Southwest Hills sailed through approvals with no objections on Monday.

The Pittsburg City Council’s 4-0 vote amended the city’s general plan map to allow West Coast Home Builders, a Seeno family company, to construct the homes instead of higher-density residences in the new Siena subdivision. Councilwoman Dionne Adams recused herself from the vote because of her property interests.

City Manager Garrett Evans urged the council to approve the changes to the latest phase of the long-planned San Marco development, calling the housing marketplace in the area “pretty sparse.”

“The goal is to get rooftops,” he said. “We’re in the midst of a housing crisis in the Bay Area and California and really look forward to developers that find it a way to bring rooftops easier and faster to the market.”

Evans added that the repurposing to single-family homes “is an endeavor we want to see,” emphasizing it’s a “solution to solving the California housing crisis.”

“Sprouts is coming to that area because of (the number of) rooftops,” Evans added, referring to the specialty grocery store’s desire to build where there will be customers. Retailers look at the number of homes when making that consideration, he said.

First launched in 1990, the San Marco multi-phase development project was approved three years later for 2,938 units, including 1,526 townhomes and apartments and 1,412 single-family homes. To date, 1,540 single-family and 462 multi-family homes have been built, along with an elementary school, neighborhood and community parks.

When West Coast Home Builders’ request to amend the project came before the city’s’ planning commission last July, Chairperson Ivelina Popova was the lone dissenter in a 4-1 approval vote. Popova said multifamily housing provides more needed affordable housing for residents.

The massive project, however, is exempt from the city’s inclusionary housing requirements for affordable homes adopted in 2004, because its development agreement came in July of 1993.

Associate city planner Allison Hodgkin said the new plan would reassign multi-family units from two other planned villages to build 206 single-family homes on 58 acres at Pittsburg’s westernmost edge, just south of State Route 4 and about 1.5 miles from BART. The total number of units built in the overall project, though, would remain the same at 2,938, she said.

In analyzing the plans, Hodgkin said planners determined new environmental documents would not be required as no substantial changes were proposed.

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