San Francisco

San Francisco

Four Seasons San Francisco

Four Seasons San Francisco offers 277 guestrooms and 142 luxury residences on upper floors. Vertical living at its best, this property was built in a forgotten neighborhood between bustling Union Square and the Financial District and features a 75 sq. ft. indoor swimming pool, art collection and signature restaurant. Yerba Buena Lane, a new upscale retail-lined pedestrian walk connects Four Seasons to the Metreon–a multi-use entertainment complex and earlier Millennium Partners project. In the surrounding area, new museums, art, dining and retail emerged.

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Millennium Tower

The landmark 60-story, 419-unit luxury residential tower sparked the renaissance of SoMa by drawing international acclaim, record sales (despite the 2008 recession), and upscale neighborhood businesses. Millennium Tower boasts a 20,000 sq. ft. Club Level and signature restaurant. After subsidence due to adjacent city tunnel construction, Millennium Partners spearheaded remediation efforts, with the full support of Millennium Tower’s Condo Association, to return the property to full structural stability. Today, it again stands as the pinnacle of luxury in San Francisco.

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Four Seasons Private Residences at 706 Mission, San Francisco

The first residential-only Four Seasons in the US, Millennium Partners designed, developed, and opened this groundbreaking property in San Francisco’s Yerba Buena neighborhood in 2021. Comprising a new 45-story tower alongside the renovated Aronson Building and incorporating 146 spacious residences, Four Seasons Private Residences at 706 Mission, San Francisco is an impressive example of adaptive reuse in a modern city and sets a new standard of opulent living by combining luxury accommodations and distinctive elegance with legendary Four Seasons personalized services.

Metreon

In 1999, Millennium Partners completed the Metreon, a 350,000 sq. ft., four-story vertical shopping and entertainment complex located in the heart of San Francisco in the thriving Yerba Buena neighborhood. It was the first of a proposed chain of Sony “urban entertainment centers” bringing together dining, shopping, music, movies, games and exhibitions.