California
Related: About this forumSafeway is building housing complexes; 2,700 units planned for S.F.
San Francisco Chronicle / 11-21-25
From the Fillmore to the Richmond to Bernal Heights, Safeway is now saying it will temporarily close multiple grocery stores to build housing complexes, a 180 degree turnaround from its decades-long position that urban grocery stores needed acres of yellow-stripped parking spaces to lure grocery-bag wielding customers to its aisles of frozen pizzas and sodas.
For San Francisco developers and housing advocates, who for years have been working to convince the grocer to redevelop some of its real estate portfolio, it is an unexpected and welcomed twist. Afterall, in addition to feeding families across the city with meats and vegetables, they argued Safeway has long been squatting on a cornucopia of surface parking lots that could go a long way toward feeding the citys hunger for new homes.
SNIP
(With) a California political landscape that is aggressively deregulating the housing construction industry, giving developers ever-increasing incentives to build bigger and faster and denser, Safeway has embraced the pro-housing mandates requiring cities across the state to zone for more density.
In the last two weeks Align Real Estate has announced a trio of deals that would add 2,696 units to Safeway-owned properties: 370 units at 3350 Mission Street, at the foot of Bernal Heights; 526 units at 850 La Playa in the Richmond District; and 1,800 in the Fillmore, at the site of a Safeway that shuttered earlier this year.
More (paywall): https://www.sfchronicle.com/sf/article/safeway-housing-san-francisco-21198930.php
Sitting underneath these new dwellings will, in most cases, be an updated Safeway store.
Built-in customer base.
No indication in the link as to who will own what. Does Safeway manage the complex? Lease the property to the developer? Sell outright? Will there be monthly specials on rent?

bucolic_frolic
(53,375 posts)for decades and decades.
Auggie
(32,736 posts)Not ideal for renters.
The city loves it because it helps meet the state mandate for new housing and increases the tax base.
I've never cared for Safeway. When I lived in SF it was across the street and was too convenient to ignore. Now that I don't I try not to step foot in it.
usonian
(22,647 posts)Last edited Fri Nov 21, 2025, 03:16 PM - Edit history (1)
I am on the dividing line between Safeway and Vons. NorCal and SoCal.
comradebillyboy
(10,932 posts)more housing and more affordable housing.
quaint
(4,419 posts)The housing situation in Cali, Colombia, is characterized by a rising new construction cycle, strong rental demand with high occupancy rates, and a significant housing deficit across the nation. New home prices are increasing, though at a slower pace than inflation, and there is a growing demand for smaller, amenity-rich apartments. Neighborhoods like the South, Granada, and San Antonio are popular for different lifestyles and investment opportunities.
Yeah, never "Cali." Just like, never "Frisco."
That's askin' for it.