Mission Bay was the original headquarters of the
California Institute for Regenerative Medicine prior to the organization's move to Oakland. It is home to several major corporate headquarters and offices, including
Uber Technologies’ global headquarters at 1725 Third Street adjacent to the
Chase Center,
Visa Inc.’s new global headquarters at 300 Toni Stone Crossing within the
Mission Rock development, and
OpenAI’s offices, which occupy part of Uber’s former Mission Bay campus at 1455 Third Street. The
Chase Center, which opened in 2019, serves as the home arena for the
Golden State Warriors of the
National Basketball Association and the
Golden State Valkyries of the
WNBA. • The northern terminus of the
Third Street Light Rail Project of the
San Francisco Municipal Railway. • The northern terminus of
Caltrain. • An
AT&T Fiber to the premises greenfield project. • The first new branch of the
San Francisco Public Library in over 40 years, The Mission Bay Branch Library, opened on July 8, 2006. It is located on the ground floor of a new multi-use facility, which includes an adult day health center, affordable senior housing, retail space and a large community meeting room. The new library is approximately , and is the 27th branch of the San Francisco Public Library. • 455 Mission Bay Boulevard South, originally planned to be the headquarters of
Pfizer's Biotherapeutics and Bioinnovation Center (started construction August 5, 2008), occupied by Nektar Therapeutics in November 2010 as their corporate headquarters. The other half of the building is occupied by Bayer's U.S. Innovation Center. • Location of the San Francisco Public Safety Building at Third Street and Mission Rock. It includes a Police headquarters, Police Station and Mission Bay Fire Station. Funding for the building was passed with a 79.4 percent positive vote on Proposition B. • The home of Rock Health, a
seed accelerator for digital health startups. • An estimated 56 biotech companies were clustered in Mission Bay in mid-2010. • The
San Francisco Bay Trail. • The Blue Greenway waterfront trail. • Sinking sidewalk on the 1200 block of 4th street. Mission Bay is served by the
N Judah and
T Third Street lines of San Francisco's
Muni Metro. The N Judah links the neighborhood to
Downtown,
BART,
Hayes Valley and the
Sunset District, and the T Third Street links to downtown, BART, and the
Bayview and
Visitacion Valley neighborhoods. Several other
Muni bus and
trolley bus lines link the area to neighborhoods to the north, west and south. The
Caltrain commuter rail system connects Mission Bay with
San Jose and
Gilroy. The
Central Subway project linking Mission Bay to San Francisco Downtown and Chinatown opened in November 2022. Although near to and often associated with
Oracle Park, the ballpark is in the adjacent
South Beach neighborhood.
UCSF has built a new 289-bed hospital serving children, women, and cancer patients which opened in February 2015. Construction of the hospital began in October 2010. Mission Bay has a large residential component with approximately 6,404 apartments and/or condos planned (1,806 of them to be designated affordable). •
Madrone is a high-end residential condominium developed by Bosa Development Corporation. Overlooking San Francisco Bay, the building has two towers with 329 modern residences, many with bay, city and Bay Bridge views. Sales and marketing firm The Mark Company achieved ongoing sales of 20 units per month in 2012 for Madrone, despite a still recovering economy. The building went to market in 2011, and more than 200 residences were sold by August 2012, making it one of San Francisco's most successful projects in more than a decade. •
Glassworks is a mixed-use building with approximately 40 modern condos of varying floor plans and sizes, located directly across
Oracle Park at 3rd Street, between King and Berry Streets. • Signature Properties has built two mid-rise condos on Berry Street:
255 Berry Street and
235 Berry Street. 255 Berry Street was completed in 2004 and 235 Berry Street in 2007. Both buildings sit between Berry Street and Mission Creek and consist mainly or two-bedroom units of various sizes and floor plans. The first floors contain townhome style condos. Units facing south have views of the creek and South Mission Bay. •
Arterra is San Francisco's first
LEED-certified market-rate condominium building, located on Fifth Street, between Berry and King Streets (300 and 325 Berry Street). The project consists of three connected buildings, each in a different exterior color: "City" (nine stories), "Park" (six stories) and "Sky" (16 stories). There are a total of 268 condos in the complex. •
Park Terrace (325 Berry Street) is similar in construction to both 255 Berry Street and 235 Berry Street in style and height (nine-story mid-rise). The building has 110 market rate homes. •
Radiance at Mission Bay is in the south part of Mission Bay, adjacent to the Bay. It consists of 99 market rate condominiums. •
Strata is a market rate apartment complex near the UCSF campus. •
Arden is a market-rate residential condominium that was developed by Bosa Development Corporation. Other notable buildings in Mission Bay include The Gladstone Institute and the Mission Bay medical offices of Kaiser Permanente.
Parks and open space Mission Bay Parks completed as of fall 2010 include Mission Creek Park, Mission Bay Commons lots on Mission Bay Boulevard between the Radiance and Nektar/Bayer buildings, the 5th Street Plaza, the sports courts, Koret Quad, and early phases of China Basin Park. The park network has since expanded with Bayfront Park, a waterfront green space along Terry A. Francois Boulevard near Chase Center, and a new two- to five-acre China Basin Park at the edge of the
Mission Rock development, which opened in 2024. These parks, operated by the Port of San Francisco, form part of the
Blue Greenway and the larger Mission Bay Parks system that connects the neighborhood’s open spaces to the waterfront. Planning has also begun to convert several interim-use parcels in Mission Bay Commons (Parcels P12, P13, and P15)—which currently house amenities such as SPARK Social SF, Parklab Gardens/Stagecoach Greens mini-golf, community gardens, and a soccer/fitness field—into more permanent and integrated open spaces extending the Commons westward. The Mission Bay Future Parks Project, led by OCII, Mission Bay Development Group, and the San Francisco Recreation and Park Department, envisions renovating and unifying these parcels to match the character of existing Commons blocks and improve public access along the neighborhood’s western edge. ==Education==