The Mercury News

A month’s rent for sliver of luxury condo

A Russian Hill unit sells for $4.35 million, or $2,219 per square foot

- By Richard Scheinin rscheinin@bayareanew­sgroup.com

Oh, the pain, the pain — and the cost, the cost — of renting a Bay Area apartment.

A luxury condo sold last month in San Francisco’s Russian Hill neighborho­od for $4.35 million. It’s a two-bedroom, two-and-ahalf-bath, 1,960-square-foot unit lined with walls of windows, mimicking the style of a midcentury Eichler home. Set on the 31st floor at 999 Green Street, with expansive views of the city, the apartment’s cost per square foot is $2,219.

“That means that just one foot of the place is more than you pay in rent for your tiny San Francisco apartment,” wrote Alexa Collins of the Homelight real estate website. “You could probably fit a toaster in that space. Or a corner of your bed.”

The cost per square foot is close to a match for what many people pay for two-bedroom apartments in San Jose, Oakland and other Bay Area cities. According to a June report from ApartmentL­ist.com, which tracks the national apartment market, the median monthly rent for a two-bedroom unit in San Jose was $2,570 last month. In Oakland, it was $2,500.

However, San Francisco is a slightly different story. One might say that the value of two square feet at 999 Green — $4,438 — is more in line with what San Francisco tenants pay for their two-bedroom apartments. According to ApartmentL­ist.com, the median monthly rent for a

two-bedroom flat in San Francisco was $4,550 last month.

The Green Street condo was sold through Sotheby’s Internatio­nal Realty and its agent Betty Brachman.

And in case you were wondering about those walls of windows: 999 Green Street is known as The Summit. It is a modern Eichler-style apartment house, described by Collins as “a rectangula­r skyscraper with a beige central concrete column that divides the building in half. You’ll find resemblanc­e between the facade of Eichler houses and this building in the two walls of windows that make up the four corners of each unit. San Francisco’s elite (who) own property in the midcentury modern … units have sprawling views of the city.”

Developer Joseph L. Eichler built distinctiv­e, mid-century tract homes that create the sense of bringing the outdoors into their flowing, light-filled interiors, lined with windows. In 1949-1974, Eichler — while based in Palo Alto and, later, San Francisco — built 10,500 houses across the region, even entire Eichler neighborho­ods, from Walnut Creek to San Jose’s Willow Glen.

 ??  ?? This 1,960-square-foot condo in San Francisco’s Russian Hill neighborho­od sold for $4.35 million. Each square foot of the unit shown above with the floorplan, right, is worth $2,219, about as much as many Bay Area tenants pay for their two-bedroom...
This 1,960-square-foot condo in San Francisco’s Russian Hill neighborho­od sold for $4.35 million. Each square foot of the unit shown above with the floorplan, right, is worth $2,219, about as much as many Bay Area tenants pay for their two-bedroom...
 ?? PHOTOS COURTESY OF ALEXA COLLINS — HOMELIGHT.COM ??
PHOTOS COURTESY OF ALEXA COLLINS — HOMELIGHT.COM
 ?? COURTESY OF ALEXA COLLINS — HOMELIGHT.COM ?? The Green Street complex is a modern Eichler-style apartment house. Eichler was known for distinctiv­e, mid-century tract homes.
COURTESY OF ALEXA COLLINS — HOMELIGHT.COM The Green Street complex is a modern Eichler-style apartment house. Eichler was known for distinctiv­e, mid-century tract homes.

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