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French Laundry star chef Thomas Keller wants Wine Country town to put affordable housing project on back burner

He wants to give it more time to simmer.

Thomas Keller, the maestro chef behind the famed French Laundry eatery, is calling for a Wine Country affordable housing project to be put on the back burner.

Town officials in Yountville need to do more outreach in the wealthy Napa County community before they move forward on the up to $60 million project, Keller and Yountville’s Ranch Market owner Arik Housley argued in a release last week.

“Housing only works if it actually works for the people who live and work here,” Keller said in the release, first reported by the Press Democrat

“Before Yountville commits to a project of this size and cost, it’s reasonable — and responsible — to slow down and make sure the fundamentals are right.”

Star chef Thomas Keller called to slow down a Wine Country affordable housing project. REUTERS
Keller runs the prestigious French Laundry. Getty Images

Well-do-to Yountville is where Keller whipped up his French Laundry, an iconic restaurant that has earned three Michelin stars.

Keller’s call to let the proposed Yountville Commons project cook a little longer came ahead of a planned Town Council meeting on Tuesday.

The workforce housing project would bring between 120 and 150 rental homes to the site of a former elementary school.

Town leaders have held nearly two dozen meetings over the past two years as the project percolated, Town Manager Brad Raulston told the Press Democrat.

“After 23 public meetings and with key decisions like unit mix still being actively studied, we believe the responsible path is to continue the transparent process that has brought us here, not to pause it,” Raulston told the paper.

“The town will continue to listen to the community as funding and phasing decisions are made by elected officials in line with established priorities, adopted plans, and voter mandates.”

The project would go on the site of the former Yountville Elementary School. Google Maps

Raulston didn’t return The Post’s request for further comment.

The release by Keller and Housley raised concerns that the project’s current plans include too many studio units — a “studio-heavy, dormitory-style approach” unsuitable for workers, SFGate reported.

They also winced at Yountville acting as the project’s developer, especially since it carries a price tag between $40 and $60 million, according to the report.

“That means we owe it to the community to fully understand the financial exposure before moving ahead,” Housley reportedly said.

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