San Francisco, CA
Proposed San Francisco Giants Trade Sends Away Big Offseason Signing
The San Francisco Giants made a couple of big signings this offseason, but could be looking for ways to get something in return for them at the upcoming MLB trade deadline.
As Rucker Haringey of FanSided pondered what San Francisco can get from a trade that sends Matt Chapman away, he found something that could work with the New York Yankees.
The deal would see Chapman sent to New York in exchange for right-handed pitchers Yoendrys Gomez and Zach Messinger.
After a rough start to the year, Chapman has completely turned things around to go with the improved play of the Giants as a whole.
The 31-year-old is slashing .241/.322/.423 on the season, at least looking like his average self.
San Francisco’s big issue is that he has a player/mutual option after 2024 and can walk away with ease, making the team lose him for nothing. A contending team could trade for him as a rental.
This type of trade package isn’t super exciting on paper, but could fill some needs with players that have the chance to turn into something better.
Gomez is the No. 17 overall prospect in the Yankees farm system. He’s 24 years old, about to turn 25, and made his MLB debut last season but has only played in five games.
He’s back in Triple-A where he has a larger samplle-size 14 games with a 4.21 ERA and 1.325 WHIP.
What has translated over the past few seasons is his ability to strike batters out with relative ease. He’s averaged double-digit strikeouts in three of the last four seasons.
The Venezuela native has a little bit of starting rotation upside, but could also be a nice reliever if he can mantain an upper-90s fastball.
Messinger is a little bit lower in their rankings, but has had a nice career in the minors since being drafted out of Virginia in 2021.
In 17 games at the Double-A level this season, he had a 3.86 ERA and a 1.154 WHIP. He’s another 24 year old, but given his success and the fact that he was in college, he shouldn’t be in the minors for much longer.
His 6-foot-6, 225-pound frame offers some oomph to his fastball and slider combo thanks to his pitching motion. His peak in a big league staff likely comes as a late-rotation starter or extended outing reliever.
As the Giants search for answers in their pitching staff, these are two potential quick turnaround pitchers to make up for losing a star fielder.
San Francisco, CA
SF Castro remembers victims of Orlando nightclub shooting 10 years later
SAN FRANCISCO (KRON) — While June is usually full of exuberant Pride Month celebrations, June 12 feels different for many in the LGBTQ community.
10 years ago, a mass shooting at Pulse Nightclub in Orlando claimed the lives of 49 people and wounded dozens more.
Stephen Torres, who acts as program manager for the Castro LGBTQ Cultural District, said the annual memorial vigil honoring the victims of the Pulse nightclub shooting is a significant part of Pride Month. It’s a reminder that Pride was born out of protest and that safe spaces for queer people will always be needed.
“Our pride, our joy, our celebration is born out of hard-fought strife and pain, and unfortunately, Pulse is part of that,” said Torres.
For Christopher Vasquez, Pulse was once his sanctuary. Vasquez now lives in San Francisco but is originally from Orlando. Every time he visited home, he spent time at Pulse. Although he wasn’t in Orlando when the shooting happened, he still felt its impact.
“When Pulse opened in 2004, it was new and fun and vibrant. It was a new, safe space for us to come dance and just have a great time,” said Vasquez. “I was just devastated. It was like a piece of my soul was taken from me. Losing 49 people — not just from my hometown but from my LGBTQ community — was absolutely heart-wrenching, and it lives with me to this day, 10 years later.”
Vasquez spoke to the crowd about what Pulse meant to him. They then marched together down Castro Street carrying a sign that read, “Remember the 49,” and laid flowers in honor of the victims.
Vasquez said the fight for LGBTQ rights and acceptance isn’t over. “It’s been 10 years and, for a while, I think people felt very comfortable with where we had come as a community in the LGBTQ space with marriage equality and other gains. But truly, Pulse was a reminder that we have so much further to go because our physical safety is always under attack.”
San Francisco, CA
Hudson Pacific lands SF’s biggest office lease in nearly a decade
San Francisco just notched its largest office lease in nearly a decade, marking the latest sign of a post-pandemic comeback for the city’s recovering commercial market.
The City and County of San Francisco inked a 502,000-square-foot lease expansion at 1455 Market Street, bringing the city government’s total presence there to more than 900,000 square feet, the San Francisco Business Times reported. The deal with landlord Hudson Pacific Properties has a 23-year term and represents the largest office lease in the city since 2018 and tops other large leases in recent years, such as OpenAI’s 486,000-square-foot lease in Mission Bay in 2023.
As it stands, the city government already occupies approximately 400,000 square feet in the building across two lease deals signed in 2024 and 2025. With the city’s new agreement, occupancy in the nearly 1.1-million-square-foot building rises to 89 percent. A few years ago, the building was less than half-occupied, according to the Business Times.
The lease deal includes two five-year extension options and a possibility for the city to own the building outright. The city government has the right to purchase the 22-story building until next March; after that, the city will still maintain the right of first offer throughout the rest of its lease.
With the new lease, several city departments will consolidate into one building, “mov[ing] out of an aging, costly and seismically vulnerable building” into a modern facility, Angela Yip, a spokesperson for the city’s real estate division, told the Business Times. The Municipal Transportation Authority, Human Services Agency and the City Administrator will move into 1455 Market starting in the fall of next year.
In doing so, the government will effectively abandon the 650,000-square-foot city-owned building across the street at 1 South Van Ness Avenue. The city plans to use the Van Ness property, zoned for residential and mixed-use purposes, to “create more housing and catalyze development” in the Mid-Market corridor, Yip said.
Hudson Pacific dolled out $93 million for the 1455 Market Street building in 2010. In 2024, Hudson Pacific bought its joint venture partner’s interest in the building for $43.5 million. At the time, the deal valued the property at about $96.6 million — a roughly 80 percent tumble from its 2015 value of nearly $219.2 million.
— Chris Malone Méndez
OpenAI surges past 1M sf of offices in SF with latest Mission Bay lease Bay Area grabs prime chunk of biggest office leases for 2025 on AI effect
Hudson Pacific buys out partner in SF office building for $44M
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San Francisco, CA
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