Golden Hill Housing Battle Tests San Diego’s Complete Communities Program
“The Lawson,” an eight-story, 186-unit housing development planned for Golden Hill, has become the center of a legal fight that could reshape how San Diego’s density-bonus programs work — and who gets to decide what a neighborhood looks like.
Neighbors filed a lawsuit arguing that the project improperly used the city’s Complete Communities housing incentive program, which allows developers to build larger and denser projects near transit stations in exchange for including affordable units. The catch: the nearest bus stop isn’t technically a “major transit stop” under state law, and the proposed bus rapid transit station that would qualify the site is still in the planning phase.
The Legal Question
The core legal question is whether a “planned” transit station counts for density-bonus purposes, or whether the infrastructure must actually exist. A judge recently declined to extend a temporary restraining order that had briefly halted construction, allowing the developer to proceed while the case moves forward.
“The developer is taking a risk building while the lawsuit is pending,” said land-use attorney Jennifer Hightower, who is not involved in the case. “But courts have generally been sympathetic to housing development in California given the state’s severe shortage.”
Community Concerns
Golden Hill residents opposing the project say their concerns go beyond legal technicalities. They argue that the eight-story building is out of scale with the neighborhood’s predominantly two- and three-story character, and that the Complete Communities program is being used to circumvent normal planning review.
“We’re not anti-housing,” said Maria Gonzalez, a 20-year Golden Hill resident. “We’re asking for housing that fits the neighborhood and follows the rules.”
What Happens Next
The case is expected to go to trial later this year. Its outcome could set important precedent for dozens of similar projects using Complete Communities incentives across San Diego.
Source: San Diego Superior Court filings, city planning department records, developer public statements, community group testimony at public hearings.