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Burlingame 'McMansion' baffles neighbors (By Mike Rosenberg, Daily News Staff Writer)
Some Burlingame residents are questioning the effectiveness of the city's crackdown on oversized residences after officials this week approved a new house that will appear considerably taller as a result of the city's design review.
A new 3 -story, 6,100-square-foot, elevator-equipped house at 2843 Adeline Drive won a height exception and general design approval from the Burlingame Planning Commission this week. The height limit for the currently vacant half-acre parcel is 30 feet, but the house will be constructed on a steep hill and thus rise 63 feet above the street level of Adeline. The property owner originally applied for a home at the base of the hill but was forced by the city to move it up the slope to comply with a code requiring a certain amount of space between the street and the home.
Neighbors of the future home, several of whom live in adjacent unincorporated Burlingame Hills, say the design will block sunlight and views and lower property values. They say the commission's actions prove it's still possible for developers to construct the so-called "McMansions" super-sized homes the city tried to limit years ago by implementing a design review process.
"This McMansion thing is just absurd," said Art Labrie, who has lived next door to the vacant property for the past 28 years and was one of six residents who protested the project on Monday. "All the neighbors are just totally upset about it. I feel it's being shoved down our throats."
Burlingame property owners must undergo a rigorous design review process for new houses, additions and other projects. They must comply with a 12-page list of regulations and an 80-page "neighborhood design guidebook" drafted in 2000 to, among other things, provide caps on home sizes. But the codes sometimes conflict with one another. In the case of the Adeline Drive home, the planning commission's design review forced the property owner to comply with street setback requirements, which in turn moved the house up the hill and made it appear considerably taller from the street and surrounding properties.
The neighbors said they were happy with the initial proposal a year ago to build the house at the base of the hill. Delays resulting from the review process cost the property owner nearly a year's worth of progress on the home, which has been mired in the planning stage for six years.
"It's a tedious process and it's also disappointing because if we built this several years ago it would have been an entirely different economy," said Robert Van Dale, the Adeline home's applicant and an architect with San Francisco-based EDI Architecture. "It's taken forever."
The planning commission was aware there was no way to satisfy both the height and setback requirements given the terrain of the hillside property, forcing a "trade-off," said Community Development Director Bill Meeker. Meeker added that massive houses on small lots are more of a concern, as opposed to the half-acre plot on Adeline.
Council Member Jerry Deal, who helped write the design review code as a planning commissioner, said the review process was designed as a "middle-of-the-road" approach to accommodate neighbors who want caps on home sizes and families who need more space, hence the possibility for variances. "The fact is, design review has worked in an excellent manner," he said. "The houses that are being developed are much smaller than the houses that were being developed before."
Council Member Terry Nagel, who before getting elected organized residents to push for the design review code, said she was not sure whether the regulations have had an effect on the number of McMansions in the city. She said some architects have found clever ways to circumvent the guidelines, such as adding a basement because it does not count toward the home's square footage cap. Nagel said city leaders may discuss updating the code at a joint city council-planning commission meeting slated for March 21."I think we are overdue on our update of design review guidelines," she said.

– Written by Fiona

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3 responses to “McMansions in Burlingame?!”

  1. susan

    Both city and county design reviewers are bought and paid for by developers. The test should be whether it stands out from the standards set by the neighborhood–and changes a long-standing setting that current neighbors have enjoyed. On Adeline and in the Hills, this has been ignored for quite some time. Look at the two multimillion dollar mcmansions crammed into the corner of Hillside and Newton. Does anyone stand up for anything anymore?

  2. HMM

    McMansions are large, ugly homes that are cut from generic mcmansion designs. If you actually look at the property, it is well designed architecturally speaking, and unique. Sure, it is large, but it is just a mansion, not a McMansion.

  3. Bruce Dickinson

    As HMM has stated above, building a custom, bespoke house that is unique to the lot is a far cry from a McMansion, a term that is used liberally most often by those who have envy and validation issues. Most of the new ones in Burlingame, while they may be similar sized due to lot constraints do look rather different from each other. and would be right at home in Hillsborough and not be out of place. When I think of McMansions I think of oversized houses that look exactly like each other in these “master planned communities” by the same builder, in effect glorified tract homes. While some in Burlingame from the 1990s do look like this, for the most part the new stuff looks pretty damn good. Also developments such as Ray Park and Mills Estates at the time were basically tract homes, with several decades of passing time they look different with paint, additions, etc, but were cookie cutter designs with veneer and paint color as the differentiators back in the day. Somehow, people think those houses are superior to the newly built ones in Burlingame Park, Easton, and the Hills. Prices are the ultimate arbiter of desirability, my friends and guess what, the new ones fetch more dollars.
    I get the sense of envy when people deride the building of larger houses next to theirs. But remember as those houses increase in value they raise the value of everyone’s land, which a dirt parcel, house or no house, is worth $1.5 million dollars alone in Burlingame today. So you are a millionaire if you were lucky to get in at the right time and be the beneficiary of families moving in and improving the community schools. Many of the people who did so 30-40 years ago basically hit the lottery, which is fantastic (and probably explains why grown children all of a sudden become really ‘close’ to their aging parents by living under the same roof).
    Sometimes it’s better to be lucky than smart, if ya know what I mean?

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