San Francisco's tech workers are flocking to this neighborhood

Located on the east side of San Francisco, Mission Bay is a newer neighborhood that's become incredibly popular for affluent tech workers seeking real estate. Source: One Mission Bay
Located on the east side of San Francisco, Mission Bay is a newer neighborhood that's become incredibly popular for affluent tech workers seeking real estate. Source: One Mission Bay

In This Article:

San Francisco has notoriously expensive housing, but that hasn’t stopped affluent tech workers from snapping up real estate in the city’s Mission Bay neighborhood.

In more recent years, Mission Bay has become the site of at least a dozen luxury condominium buildings sporting high-end finishes and amenities that appeal to tech workers employed by Apple (AAPL), Facebook (FB), Google (GOOG, GOOGL), Lyft (LYFT), Pinterest (PINS), Square (SQ), Uber (UBER), and other Silicon Valley companies, according to data provided exclusively to Yahoo Finance from real estate firm Compass.

The 303-acre stretch of urban land is also extremely desirable because of upcoming developments, as well as its close proximity to tech companies in the city and I-280 and US-101 — the two most frequently used highways for getting to tech companies in the San Francisco Bay Area’s South Bay, including Apple, Facebook, and Google.

“A lot of tech employees prefer that their homes be in pretty close proximity to their work,” explains Compass big data realtor Deniz Kahramaner of this real estate phenomenon. “Mission Bay is a newer, up-and-coming area that hits that sweet spot for many of them, with a lot of high-end residential constructions located a walk or quick Uber or Lyft ride away from their company headquarters.”

During 2018, at least 89 tech workers purchased homes in Mission Bay, according to Kahramaner — a 134% increase in purchases by tech workers year-over-year — followed by 54 homes purchased in the South Beach neighborhood and 39 homes purchased in South of Market, or SoMa, during the same time period. To be sure, though, one luxury condo in Mission Bay finished in 2018 is responsible for 45 of the 89 units sold in the neighborhood last year.

Amenities, amenities

One Mission Bay, a luxury condominium development, sold the most number of units in San Francisco's Mission Bay neighborhood to tech workers. Source: One Mission Bay
One Mission Bay, a luxury condominium development, sold the most number of units in San Francisco's Mission Bay neighborhood to tech workers. Source: One Mission Bay

Matt Fuller, co-founder of Jackson Fuller Real Estate, compares these luxury high-rise buildings and their comprehensive amenities to “vertically-gated communities.”

“Many of these tech workers like ‘turnkey’ homes: properties they can just immediately live in with community-oriented set of amenities where someone else takes care of the maintenance,” explains Fuller. “They can just drag their laptop to a common area and go to work.”

The most popular residential property in the neighborhood? One Mission Bay.

The 350-unit luxury condominium building, which is over 90% occupied, sold 45 units in 2018 to tech workers, according to public filings. It includes a heated outdoor pool and poolside cabanas, private dining rooms, chef’s catering kitchen, library, fitness center and sauna, courtyard lounge and firepits, as well as nearly 16,600 square-feet of retail space. While studios and one-bedroom units are among the units entirely sold out, two-bedrooms remain available, starting at $1.56 million for a 1,173-square-foot, two-bedroom, two-bathroom unit. Available three-bedrooms, meanwhile, start at just over $2 million for a 1,639-square-foot three-bedroom, two-bathroom unit.