Galleria Boheme, an event space at 2391 Mission Street, received its limited live performance (LLP) permit after extensive public comment on May 16, 2023, but the application exposed deep neighborhood tensions about noise, building suitability and landlord responsibilities.
The applicants, co‑owners Claudia Legari and Tibor Sabo, said the venue will host classical and world music, dance, small theater and readings and that they intend to comply with sound limits and planning processes. They operate currently under a temporary use authorization that allows one event per month until a planning department change of use is finalized.
Several immediate neighbors, including residents who live directly above the business, told commissioners they experience vibration, audible music through floorboards and repeated 311 and SFPD calls tied to events. One tenant who said they had lived upstairs for more than a decade described events that left trash, urine and obstructed sidewalks, and said the space lacks the soundproofing necessary for daily entertainment. A remote caller also alleged prior civil and financial disputes involving one owner; the commission did not adjudicate those claims in the hearing.
The landlord and supporters testified in favor of the permit, noting the site’s history of live music uses on Mission Street and offering outreach and remediation (including an offer of carpeting). Staff said the internal sound limit would be set per Article 29 and that inspections and mitigation can follow if complaints continue. Commissioners asked about testing inside neighboring units; staff said it is not standard to take residential interior measurements but the office has done so in unique cases, and mediation/mitigation is often the practical path.
After public comment and discussion, the commission approved the LLP with staff recommendations. Voting recorded two no votes (Commissioner Falzon and Commissioner Torres) and several members expressed the expectation that the permit will bring the venue under closer scrutiny — a point some commissioners framed as a reason to approve so the commission and inspectors can act more quickly if problems recur.
What happens next: staff will set internal sound limits based on ambient measurements, monitor 311 complaints, and may work with the parties on mediation and remediation. The applicants must complete required planning and building steps to change the use and pursue daily LLP operations.