Bay Area Housing Crisis: This woman lives in a closet in San Francisco's Alamo Square neighborhood

Wayne Freedman Image
ByWayne Freedman KGO logo
Thursday, August 1, 2019
This woman lives in a closet in San Francisco
A woman in San Francisco is only paying $1,200 a month for rent-- but there's a catch.

SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- ABC7 News is committed to Building a Better Bay Area.. All this week we are looking at the Bay Area's housing crisis. So many around the region are getting creative to ease this housing crunch. Here's a look at a few San Francisco residents who've come up with a solution.

SHARE YOUR HOUSING STORY: How are you making it work here in the Bay Area?

Alamo Square is a picture-perfect still frame of idyllic San Francisco overlooking the famous Victorian Painted Ladies.

This undated image shows tourists at San Francisco
This undated image shows tourists at San Francisco's Alamo Square.
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"I would love to live here," said a tourist from Surry, England.

So imagine the incredibly fortunate residents of 575 Pierce in corner apartment 102.

Signs for Pierce and Hayes streets are seen in San Francisco.
Signs for Pierce and Hayes streets are seen in San Francisco.
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Alex Steup can sing the praises.

"I love the design," she said. "The amazing view. The location."

Alex Steup points to the small window in her closet in San Francisco.
Alex Steup points to the small window in her closet in San Francisco.
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Now, the surprise. Alex pays just $1,200 a month in rent. But there's a twist.

"What's that?" I asked, poking a finger into the low ceiling.

"The bed, actually," she said.

Alex Steup could write a book about organizing in small spaces.
Alex Steup could write a book about organizing in small spaces.
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Talk about high rents in San Francisco -- Steup lives in a 10-by-4.5 foot converted closet.

"That was my bedroom for many years," said her roommate, Tristan Harvey, who spent much of his life there. He recently enlarged the area into a section of living room by adding plywood.

"I built that to expand the space because this room could stand to lose a little bit," he said. "And I could use the money."

Freedman: "Did you envision yourself living in a closet at 33 years old?"

Steup: "I don't like to call it that."

Freedman: "What do you call it?"

Steup: "A second living area. Uh huh. Or 'The Cloud.'"

Yes, they even have a dog. Roxie is a 6-year-old rescued pit bull.
Yes, they even have a dog. Roxie is a 6-year-old rescued pit bull.
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Beyond the semantics, this is a case of outside appearances sometimes being deceiving. It's old news to Sam Moss, a devoted advocate for public housing and critic of San Francisco's status quo.

"Saying that housing is a crisis has become cliché," he said. "It's beyond a crisis."

According to Moss, it's more like a self-imposed crisis due to the city's zoning restrictions against high density housing.

As Tristan Harvey told us, Alex Steup rents the closet because he needs the money.

His father, Larry Harvey, co-founded Burning Man and lived in the apartment for four decades, but he never transferred the lease before his death last April.

Tristan Harvey
Tristan Harvey's father lived in this rent-controlled apartment for 40 years, but never transferred the lease.
KGO-TV

Within days, the landlord raised what had been a rent of $1,600 a month to $3,600 a month. Tristan received the landlord's letter on the day of his father's memorial.

"I built that to expand the space because this room could stand to lose a little bit. And, I could use the money," said Tristan, who has other financial concerns because he is HIV-positive.

Here
Here's Tristan Harvey with his father in the apartment many years ago. Larry Harvey founded Burning Man. Tristan wants the lower rent grandfathered in. He's appealing to the city.
KGO-TV

"I mean he had the legal right to do it. But morally? Probably not," opined Sam Moss about Tristan's landlord.

Harvey has appealed to the city. It's the principle, he says. "I am struggling to keep my head above water. And I think a lot of San Francisco can share that sentiment. There are more than you can imagine who have steady jobs and live in cars because they cannot afford to live any other way."

RELATED: $1,200 a month bunk beds aim to help ease San Francisco's housing crisis

When compared with that option, a closet with an elevated bed looks pretty good.

"It is really cozy up here," said Steup as she settled in.

Do we dare we call this a new normal?

RELATED: Bay Area housing prices: A look at the outrageous numbers

"What is the solution?" we asked Sam Moss.

"Change the zoning laws," he said. "Fewer single family homes. More housing. Just build it!"

"What is your dream?" we asked Steup.

RELATED: Bay Area housing: How prices have changed since the '90s

"To make enough money to have a dog and a yard for people to play in," she answered.

But will that ever happen in San Francisco?

"Never..." she said.

Take a look at ABC7's latest stories and videos about efforts to Build a Better Bay Area.