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Panelist

Ms. Anne Taupier

Executive Director San Francisco Office of Economic and Workforce Development

Mayor Breed appointed Anne to the of Director of Development in the Office of Economic and Workforce Development in March of 2020. Prior to this appointment, Anne worked for over 10 years as a senior project manager on that office’s Joint Development team. Her focus in the Director’s position is on recognizing that housing affordability is a global crisis and the Joint Development team will be exploring and identifying the best practices and innovative solutions to address this crisis as it impacts San Francisco. The team is also responsible for delivering tangible results to entitle, construct and stabilize housing for every San Franciscan. This includes addressing the fact that there are deep structural problems of housing affordability created by significantly underbuilding over the past several decades and confronting the affordability and equitable housing crisis with 21st Century solutions. The Director of Development and Joint Development project managers work collaboratively with every City agency, overseeing the coordination, management, entitlement and implementation of large, mixed-use development projects as they navigate the City’s entitlement, legislative and political processes. The Director acts as the City’s “owner’s Rep” negotiating with market rate developers to provide community benefits packages that reflect and enhance the City’s housing, affordability, sustainability, jobs, open space, equity and transportation policy objectives. Anne has worked on projects including: The Hunter’s Point Shipyard, America’s Cup, 5M, The Plumber’s Union Mixed-Use project, The Conservatory of Music student housing project, India Basin mixed-use project, the Kilroy, Flower Mart project, Treasure Island, Potrero Power Station and others. Prior to her role in OEWD, she was the Director of Scheduling for San Francisco Mayor Gavin Newsom coordinating the Mayor’s daily, weekly and long-term strategic scheduling in concert with the Mayor’s communications director and Chief of Staff.

Speaking at

Wed Nov 05 4:00 PM — 5:00 PM (GMT-08:00) Pacific Time Moscone West - Level 2, 2022-2024

Doom Loop to Boom Loop: Is San Francisco on the Brink of the next Gold Rush?

From the literal gold rush of 1849, San Francisco has been a boom and bust town. What is unique about San Francisco that makes for such dramatic cycles, what can we learn about when the next cycle will begin, and what is being done to accelerate its rebound? The latest and most severe cycle may be the bust experienced from the COVID pandemic. San Francisco has been the poster child for problems that were occurring in urban downtowns. Office and retail occupancy decreased, which resulted in the downtown being labeled as a Doom Loop. Will history repeat itself? Are the elements that helped San Francisco rebound in the past again pointing to another once in a cycle opportunity again to participate in the next downtown Boom? Hear about why a tower significantly taller than the current tallest tower West of the Mississippi is moving forward and why downtown will have an electronic music enterprise housed in a building as iconic as Capital Records in Hollywood. To help accelerate the recovery, ULI and the City of San Francisco partnered to convene an Advisory Services panel of experts from around the country on how to revitalize downtown San Francisco. The panel provided strategic recommendations for leveraging the city's existing physical assets, identifying opportunities for financial incentives, and implementing reforms that promote the economic and social health of the downtown. Learn where downtown San Francisco stands today and what is likely to happen tomorrow.