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About 300 community members came together under a clear blue sky last week for the ribbon-cutting at our new Town Square. It’s a long story which you can revisit via the Post Office category here from the groundbreaking in 2021 all the way back to 2012. I thought Mayor Michael Brownrigg delivered an outstanding speech and Michael kindly gave me his detailed notes to excerpt here. Here are some very lightly edited highlights of that speech.

The history of Burlingame last 50 years is history of parking lots: buying and leveling our bowling alley, the old City Hall, and others to build parking lots to compete with malls. 15 years ago, with our downtown sagging, we realized it was not parking, it was vitality and activity that mattered. And those parking lots – bought as a way to enhance Burlingame — now looked a lot like underutilized assets.

In 2008/9, in the heart of the Great Recession, our city leaders challenged our community, let’s reimagine our downtown. Over the course of a couple of years and many, many meetings, a vision arose. It was the product of robust input from groups like Citizens for a Better Burlingame and the downtown BID, Planning Commission, community leaders, etc.

We now see so many fruits from that 2010 Downtown Plan: affordable housing, creative and efficient parking, expanding energy and retail over to Howard, enhancing Burlingame Avenue with wide sidewalks and more pedestrian amenities. And today, the cherry on top, our new Town Square.

There are so many people to thank. Neighbors like the Salmas and the Karps and the owners of Yves De Lorme, who have consistently leaned in. Other business owners like Janet and Carl Martin who worked hard to make Safeway a better project way back when and who care deeply about the entire fabric of our downtown. Safeway was the first salvo by Burlingame in terms of imagining a more pedestrian friendly, community oriented and vital downtown. And a shout out to Stanley Lo, who helped control the Post Office site after it was put on the market and then helped sell the site to a group of people who could honor the history and imagine the future, and to Dave Hopkins, a co-conspirator at Sares Regis without whose courage this project might never have materialized.

Michael Brownrigg

Burlingame Mayor (2026)

On the occasion of the opening of the Town Square, April 2, 2026

As I said, this is just an excerpt, and he thanked many more people before turning the podium over several other speakers. Hopefully this Instagram video will load properly for a taste of the proceedings. The story about moving the Post Office over the downtown culvert and then back is one for the ages and I can’t wait for the restaurant that is the last remaining bit of the project.

Michael told me last week that he would use last night’s city council meeting to publicly affirm what we have been hearing for a sometime–that he would not seek re-election this time around. He leaves quite a service legacy having been appointed to the Planning Commission in 2001 and joining the city council in 2009. As we have seen with other long-serving commissioners and council members, their institutional knowledge is incredibly valuable in subsequent projects. And they still get button-holed in the grocery aisle long after they are out of office. Congrats, sir.

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8 responses to “Town Square: Postal bliss”

  1. Amazing

    Maybe they could add a mailbox to replace the drive through one we lost?

  2. Jennifer Pfaff

    That’s a good idea. They are in short supply.

  3. Handle Bard

    I didn’t see a bike rack either but maybe I missed it?

  4. Bruce Dickinson

    It’s dynamite that Burlingame has its own distinct town square and Bruce Dickinson welcomes having more public space and preserving the beautiful Art Deco post office frontage! However, yours truly does have a couple of bones to pick with the design:

    1) There should be more trees on the eastern side of the square, there’s a lot of sun and a lot of hard surfaces that become a heat trap. Maybe including more shrubs, planter boxes, grass areas, bushes which would have helped break up the stone/hard surface look. I get they want to have room for a stage/performances but think more could have been integrated to break up the flat, hard surfaces. Also perhaps include some shaded areas/pergolas or hang/stretch “sails” from poles for some shade. Would have been nice to hang some string lights from those as well.

    2) The western portion has these single chairs and small tables whose placement make no sense. The chairs are too far from each other to have natural conversation and the tables are really too far from the chairs to reach for drinks/food. They should have put 4 tables and 4 single chairs around them, or a mix of 2 chars and smaller tables maybe a 6 chairs around a larger table etc. I know they’re bolted to the pavers but I’m sure that can be easily fixed.

    I know I know, people are thinking here comes THE Bruce Dickinson with post facto comments after everything is done, but I will say quite frankly, nobody came to ask my opinion in the first place! *shrug* I think some of these suggestions can still be incorporated. When there’s cogent, quality advice available to the community for free, take it while you can!

  5. Mom

    I agree. More shade and better furniture would be great. Also that foosball table won’t last long.

  6. Cassandra

    Those cherry bomb size seed pods for the trees will twist ankles and fell skateboarders. Also those wood benches need anti-skateboard plugs on them as Meta did on the shoreline furniture.

  7. Not Karen

    What is up with the stupid screwed down chairs? It’s like they think a bunch of Covid Karens are going to have their morning coffee klatch there 8 feet apart. No Karen could even hear the other Karen

  8. Jennifer Pfaff

    Though they do look like they have screws to fasten to the pavers, I do not think these are engaged (yet?). I made an attempt to nudge one the other day, and got it to move a few inches. A number of them have been “on the move” lately and are forming different (better?) seating groups. They do weigh A LOT, though, and I guess that’s the point, so people don’t take off with them.

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