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  #121  
Old Posted Jun 18, 2017, 4:10 PM
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Silvery Towers - Jun 17, 2017









Coming on to the 15th floor.
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  #122  
Old Posted Jun 19, 2017, 7:26 PM
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https://www.google.com/maps/d/viewer...409999998&z=20

Good link to keep up with all the developments going on in San Jose. Not sure how often it gets updated though. Sparq needs to be moved to the "under construction" category but overall great site
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  #123  
Old Posted Jun 21, 2017, 6:15 AM
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City hall has approved the plan to negotiate exclusively with Google over the city owned lots.
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  #124  
Old Posted Jun 21, 2017, 10:17 PM
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City hall has approved the plan to negotiate exclusively with Google over the city owned lots.
Link: http://www.bizjournals.com/sanjose/n...l.html?ana=fbk
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  #125  
Old Posted Jun 23, 2017, 7:13 PM
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http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/06/2...e-tech-campus/

Quote:
Exclusive: Million-square-foot downtown San Jose campus proposed near planned Google village

SAN JOSE — The Google village project in San Jose is becoming a magnet for planned development: Two realty firms said Friday they have proposed a million-square-foot campus in an aging district of downtown along the Guadalupe River.

TMG Partners and Valley Oak Partners, two veteran Bay Area realty builders, have teamed up with a proposal to develop roughly one million square feet of offices in an old industrial area, not far from where Google is eyeing up to 8 million square feet of offices in the vicinity of Diridon Station and the SAP Center. The TMG-Valley Oak complex is on 5.4 acres north of SAP Center.
Looks like there is more interest in the area, but who knows if they'll follow through.
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  #126  
Old Posted Jun 28, 2017, 9:40 PM
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https://www.cpexecutive.com/post/mam...ject-in-talks/

Mammoth 1 MSF San Jose Office Project in Talks
TMG-VOP Julian LLC, a joint venture between TMG Partners and Valley Oak Partners LLC, has submitted a preliminary review application to the City of San Jose for the development of three six-story buildings.
by Ariela Moraru | Jun 27, 2017
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440 W. Julian St., San Jose
440 W. Julian St., San Jose
Nearly one million square feet of office space is underway near the Diridon Station in downtown San Jose. TMG-VOP Julian LLC, a joint venture between TMG Partners and Valley Oak Partners LLC, has submitted a preliminary review application to the City of San Jose for the development of three six-story office buildings with below-grade parking. Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates was selected as the official designer firm.

ALL THE DETAILS
Located at 440 W. Julian St. within the Diridon Station area plan, the 5.4-acre site is partially occupied by industrial buildings and 287-space parking lots. The three buildings will total 157,000 square feet, 345,000 square feet and 490,000 square feet, respectively. Each building will feature floor plates ranging from 30,000 square feet to 90,000 as well as 15-foot ceiling heights and large private terraces on every floor.

The site is bounded by North Autumn Street to the west, West Julian Street to the south and the recently opened Autumn Parkway to the east. The development has pedestrian access to the Guadeloupe River Park across Autumn Parkway and is a ten-minute walk to the restaurants at San Pedro Square, the financial center of San Jose and SAP Center arena. The project is also a short walk to Diridon Station, San Jose’s intermodal transportation hub consisting of Caltrain, VTA Light-Rail, along with the planned BART and California High Speed Rail station.

“This is one of the last development opportunities in the Bay Area that truly brings together the concept of multi-modal transportation, amenity-rich infrastructure, and state-of-the-art workspaces,” said Matt Field, chief investment officer at TMG Partners, in prepared remarks. “Downtown San Jose has come into its own with its vibrant cultural scene, diverse housing offerings and a strong and growing technology sector making it attractive to employers and employees alike. We have an opportunity to create an iconic headquarters location that will appeal to Bay Area employers of all sizes.”

The area is rapidly transforming, as negotiations for a nearby Google village development is also ongoing.

TMG’S RECENT SAN JOSE ACTIVITY
TMG’s increased activity in the San Jose office market includes the $154 million acquisition of an eight-building, 810,000-square-foot office campus from Cisco Systems in 2013. In August 2016, TMG also acquired 2460 and 2480 N. First St., a two-building, 148,000-square-foot commercial property that the company is currently renovating and leasing.

Image courtesy of TMG-VOP Julian LLC
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  #127  
Old Posted Jun 29, 2017, 11:22 PM
Bwin517 Bwin517 is offline
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Trammell wouldn't keep buying up land in DTSJ unless something big was happening. *fingers crossed*

http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/06/2...roperties/amp/

Google partner Trammell Crow buys more downtown San Jose properties
George Avalos
PUBLISHED: June 29, 2017 at 1:39 pm | UPDATED: June 29, 2017 at 3:32 pm
Categories:Business, California News, Economy, Latest Headlines, News, Real Estate, Technology

Parts of downtown San Jose, including SAP Center and Diridon Station. Google ally Trammell Crow has bought more properties in downtown San Jose, adding to a collection of sites being assembled for a potential Google transit village near the Diridion train station.
SAN JOSE — Google ally Trammell Crow has bought more properties in downtown San Jose, adding to a collection of sites being scooped up for a potential Google transit village near the Diridon train station.

The most recent purchases included a house and vacant land near the corner of South Montgomery and West San Carlos streets. The acquisitions closed Thursday, according to Santa Clara County records.

TC Agoge, an affiliate of Trammell Crow, paid $4.6 million for the two properties, county documents show. San Francisco-based Trammell Crow is a development partner for Mountain View-based Google in the Diridon Station development efforts.

This month alone, the TC Agoge group has bought properties at six different addresses.

Mountain View-based Google could potentially occupy 6 million to 8 million square feet of office and other space near Diridion Station and SAP Center, according to a recent memo issued by San Jose city staffers.

“Google’s vision of an integrated development in San Jose aligns with the aspirations of the City, transit agencies, surrounding neighborhoods, and downtown businesses for extraordinary architecture, urban design, environmental sustainability, retail amenities, transit ridership and vibrant public spaces,” San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo, the city’s vice mayor and three other council members wrote in a recent letter to the City Council.

On June 20, the City Council voted 10-1 to launch the bold plan to remake the west side of downtown San Jose into a massive Google village. In the first public test, the council agreed to negotiate exclusively with Google to sell 16 city-owned parcels to the search giant.

“Google understands that we are an important part of the community,” Mark Golan, a Google vice president of real estate services for Northern California, told the City Council on June 20 prior to the governing body’s vote. “We all share an interest in getting it right.”

The property purchases that occurred in June, which included clusters at the north end of where Google is eyeing a potential vast transit village, and the acquisitions at the south end of the development zone, are an indication that a great deal of planning is going into the evolving effort, said Bob Staedler, a principal executive with Silicon Valley Synergy, a land use, development and planning consultant.

“All the activity shows this is a serious effort and that people at Google and Trammell Crow are master planning this in a thoughtful way,” Staedler said Thursday.”

The public-private partnership that appears to be emerging between the city of San Jose and Google might be the catalyst that’s required for rapid and effective development of the west side of downtown San Jose, Staedler said.

“This is what the city has been needing for some time, to have someone look at the big picture, have a master plan, and to start to acquire the properties that are necessary,” Staedler said. “The city can help where it can, but hte private sector can simply move faster than the public sector.”
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  #128  
Old Posted Jul 2, 2017, 11:11 PM
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P I C T U R E U P D A T E S

Station Village:





777 Park:



Other side:



808 W San Carlos:





And as a bonus, Silver/Ohlone/whatever... at ground level, but that's something considering its no longer a hole in the ground:

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  #129  
Old Posted Jul 3, 2017, 1:20 AM
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Wow thanks for the photo updates! May I have your permission to post these photos and credit you on a different San Jose Development thread? If you would rather do it then that's fine too!
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  #130  
Old Posted Jul 3, 2017, 2:10 AM
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Originally Posted by gillynova View Post
Wow thanks for the photo updates! May I have your permission to post these photos and credit you on a different San Jose Development thread? If you would rather do it then that's fine too!
As long as its not skyscrapercity go for it!
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  #131  
Old Posted Jul 3, 2017, 2:55 AM
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Originally Posted by yakumoto View Post
As long as its not skyscrapercity go for it!
It was lol. Do you have something against that site/people?
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  #132  
Old Posted Jul 3, 2017, 3:18 AM
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It was lol. Do you have something against that site/people?
They're marginally better than city-data when it comes to keeping the reactionary bullshit out the development forums... I'm not going to complain about their existence but I certainly don't want to provide content for them.
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  #133  
Old Posted Jul 3, 2017, 7:36 AM
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They're marginally better than city-data when it comes to keeping the reactionary bullshit out the development forums... I'm not going to complain about their existence but I certainly don't want to provide content for them.
I respect that and I won't do it. Good thing I asked haha
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  #134  
Old Posted Jul 6, 2017, 8:06 PM
Bwin517 Bwin517 is offline
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Great article!

http://www.sanjoseinside.com/2017/06...-get-it-right/

Has San Jose’s moment arrived?

Two years ago, Mountain View rebuffed Google’s bid to massively expand its headquarters. A few months later, the U.S. Supreme Court declined to take up San Jose’s long-shot bid to scuttle Major League Baseball’s federal antitrust exemption and allow the Oakland A’s to relocate to land across from SAP Center.

The 2015 rejections created a match made in commercial real estate heaven for both spurned suitors, which are now negotiating a deal to bring Google to downtown San Jose.

Instead of bringing in a money-sucking professional sports franchise, San Jose redeployed the assembled parcels and offered them to a corporate citizen that could transform the city. Google can afford to buy the land, finance its own building, contribute badly needed tax revenue and create high-wage employment. Northern California’s largest city provides Google a way to escape traffic nightmares and a housing crisis as it rockets to a trillion dollar valuation.

The company’s parent, Alphabet Inc., is dabbling in a host of futuristic “moonshot” ventures that include robotics, driverless cars and flying vehicles. With facilities all over the world and no shortage of hubris or cash, Google has seen its universe-changing ambitions stymied by the parochial hand-wringing of a municipality wary of putting too many alien eggs in one basket. San Jose, on the other hand, has spent 35 years and a couple of billion dollars of its taxpayers’ money to become Silicon Valley’s capital, yet it still plays fifth fiddle to Palo Alto, San Francisco, Mountain View and Cupertino. San Jose has seen many dashed hopes and false starts.

A downtown mixed use development initiative collapsed after the dot-com implosion. Subsidized retailers exited. Plans for Apple, Cisco and Tandem (remember them?) to locate their campuses in Coyote Valley disappeared in economic cycles and acquisitions. Meanwhile, Santa Clara won the pro sports lottery, Santana Row flourished, Campbell became an entertainment destination and Sunnyvale turned into a residential hot spot of million dollar-plus homes.

Optimists knew the wave would head south and San Jose would be caught up in the swell. The peninsula became too expensive, crowded and wary of hypergrowth, and San Francisco’s boom has become an angry mess of gentrification-sparked class warfare and culture shifts.

San Jose’s downtown, at the same time, is coming into its own, with an expanding roster of millennial-friendly yoga studios, coffee shops, craft cocktail bars and microbreweries. The ugly tan ’80s-era buildings that dominate the flat-topped skyline have been dressed up with LED mood lighting and murals. Even pedestrian crosswalks are being turned into painted art pieces in a bid to add more color.

In downtown’s shadow, across the meek Guadalupe River, lies a district dominated by auto body shops and other light industrial uses, agricultural era galvanized roofs, neighborhood markets, working class bars, the vestige of a sausage factory and weed-choked, tent encampment circled parking lots with circular skid marks.

That all can change.

Mountain View used to be a dump, literally. The Google campus and Shoreline Amphitheatre are built on landfill. Its now-trendy downtown used to be filled with low-budget restaurants and dated retail.

Google’s arrival will help San Jose’s jobs-housing imbalance, a phenomenon that has left San Jose with some of the valley’s worst parks, schools and roads, and a hollowed-out police force.

For years, San Jose has provided housing for the lucrative job growth in other cities, which captured tax revenues and upgraded amenities for their residents while San Jose lagged.

Neighboring Santa Clara last year brushed off a nearly unanimous chorus of critics and plowed ahead with plans to build the 9 million-square-foot CityPlace Santa Clara adjacent to Levi’s stadium, which will create 24,760 jobs while only adding 1,360 residential units.

San Jose grew by nearly 10,000 residents in the past year—the biggest jump in Northern California. It can easily accommodate a campus of 20,000, which will represent less than 5 percent of the city’s jobs. Other cities are looking to go the other way and cool down job growth to preserve their communities. “We’re looking to increase the rate of housing growth, but decrease the rate of job growth,” Palo Alto Mayor Patrick Burt said last year.

With a robust transit infrastructure, Googlers can commute in from San Francisco, the South Valley or the Peninsula on an electrified Caltrain, and Fresno may soon be a 50-minute high-speed rail ride away.

Google made a smart decision—maybe the only decision it could make. San Jose is a behemoth, with land, housing, urban culture, rail lines and an international airport. It has a major city’s infrastructure and can support the ambitions of an expanding global technology leader. Apple and Facebook now hold major conferences here instead of in San Francisco, and the cool factor seems to be taking hold.

Hopefully, Google will see fit to plan a true urban campus that embraces the downtown and the community around it rather than one that seals its employees in a hermetic bubble with free food and ridiculous perks. Companies historically perform better in urban environments, and Google may benefit from a socially connected workforce as it tackles a transforming world.

We can debate the essential unfairness about displacing family-owned small businesses to make way for one of the world’s richest corporations. However, if the city can see fit to incentivize development, it can sprinkle a little love the other way—and it should, in the form of relocation assistance.

A smart agreement will avoid giving away the store with tax breaks, but it shouldn’t load the deal with labor carve-outs and red tape, things that drive up building costs and delay realization. San Jose should move fast to make this happen. Conditions can change quickly, and decades from now we don’t want to be talking about the one that got away.
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  #135  
Old Posted Jul 11, 2017, 7:03 PM
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According to the news recently offices and hotels have been trading at higher rates. I haven't seen anything in the lease rates to justify higher prices for office buildings.

http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/07/1...-record-price/

I'm hopeful that some other proposals like 333 W San Fernando(https://www.bizjournals.com/sanjose/...ntown-san.html) and the tower at the Four Points(http://www.mercurynews.com/2017/04/0...town-san-jose/) might get built based on the higher demand. Though this might drive the more budget minded companies to move to Campbell. Downtown has been a fairly affordable office market for Silicon Valley for years.

With the extra demand they might actually get built. Not to mention all the residential demand if they jobs to materialize.
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  #136  
Old Posted Jul 11, 2017, 8:24 PM
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So whats the tallest building out there right now?
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  #137  
Old Posted Jul 12, 2017, 12:06 AM
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So whats the tallest building out there right now?
It's still the 88, the height limits probably never allow a building much taller downtown. The SJSC towers are supposed to go up to 295ft which is 9 feet taller.
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  #138  
Old Posted Jul 13, 2017, 4:32 AM
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http://www.prnewswire.com/news-relea...300486283.html

nice little TOD for San Jose!

SAN JOSE, Calif., July 11, 2017 /PRNewswire/ -- Western National Group has purchased a 6.5-acre parcel of land from Berryessa Properties, LLC — owners of the San Jose Flea Market, a family-run business that remains one of the largest outdoor markets of its kind in the nation — for multifamily residential and retail space. Western National Group plans to develop up to 560 multifamily units and approximately 37,000 sq. ft. of ground-floor retail space in the fifth phase at Market Park San Jose (www.marketparksanjose.com), a 120-acre, mixed-use, transit-oriented community adjacent to the Berryessa BART station, scheduled to open by the end of 2017.

Western National Group plans to develop up to 560 apartment units over 37,000 sq. ft. of street-level retail space on 6.5 acres of land in the fifth phase of Market Park San Jose (www.marketparksanjose.com), a 120-acre mixed-use community adjacent to the soon-to-open Berryessa BART station. Western National purchased the parcel from Berryessa Properties, LLC, owners of the San Jose Flea Market. Ralph Borelli and Chris Anderson of Borelli Investment Company acted as brokers for the transaction.
Western National Group plans to develop up to 560 apartment units over 37,000 sq. ft. of street-level retail space on 6.5 acres of land in the fifth phase of Market Park San Jose (www.marketparksanjose.com), a 120-acre mixed-use community adjacent to the soon-to-open Berryessa BART station. Western National purchased the parcel from Berryessa Properties, LLC, owners of the San Jose Flea Market. Ralph Borelli and Chris Anderson of Borelli Investment Company acted as brokers for the transaction.
With the proceeds from the sale of the current phase together with a previous transaction with KB Home to build 162 city-style townhomes on 5.6 acres of land, San Jose Flea Market will contribute $5,000,000 to the City of San Jose Dept. of Parks, Recreation and Neighborhood Services to help pay for two city parks totaling approximately 7 acres, plus an additional $6,000,000 for utility infrastructure improvements in Market Park's North Village.

The land sale transactions have been brokered by Ralph Borelli and Chris Anderson of Borelli Investment Company, a commercial real estate firm that has served the Santa Clara Valley for 62 years.

"As Silicon Valley continues to grow, there's an ever-increasing need for places for people to live," said Ralph N. Borelli, chairman of Borelli Investment Company. "Market Park San Jose, located immediately adjacent to the soon-to-open Berryessa BART station, is ideally situated for families and individuals — whether they plan to work in downtown San Jose, at one of the Valley's many high-technology firms, or in Oakland or even San Francisco, which will be only about an hour away via convenient BART."

Modern one-, two- and three-bedroom apartments will be offered within a multi-building, mid-rise complex — with retail stores and restaurants occupying street-level spaces. The apartments will feature efficient design layouts highlighted by attractive accents and upscale finishes, in a location that's ideal for those with active lifestyles.

When added to the 449 townhomes and single-family residences previously built by KB Home or nearing completion within the community, the new apartments will bring the total number of housing units there to more than 1,000. Still planned are another 100,000 sq. ft. of supermarket-anchored retail space in a center to be developed in Market Park's North Village. The shopping center is scheduled for a 2019 opening.

The master-planned community is also envisioned to eventually host a separate South Village with an additional 1,818 residential units and up to 2,000,000 square feet of mid-rise office and retail space, plus parking. VTA and BART service, as well as a new interchange at Mabury Road and Highway 101, will allow for efficient transportation for the residents and those people employed at Market Park San Jose.

"The Market Park community is destined to become one of San Jose's signature mixed-use developments," Borelli remarked. "With affordable housing, retail and restaurants, future office space, neighborhood parks, lush greenbelts, and the Coyote Creek trail bisecting the community, this will be a uniquely welcoming and reinvigorating place to live."

For additional information about sales and leasing opportunities at Market Park San Jose, please contact Ralph Borelli or Chris Anderson at Borelli Investment Company. Visit www.borelli.com or call (408) 453-4700. Or go to the community's website at www.marketparksanjose.com.

The San Jose Flea Market continues to serve guests on Wednesdays, Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays from dawn until dusk, excluding holidays, at 1590 Berryessa Road in San Jose. For more information, call (800) BIG-FLEA (244-3532) or visit them at www.sjfm.com.

About the San Jose Flea Market—For 57 years, the San Jose Flea Market has been a place where families have made memories while playing, shopping and eating together. Today, it remains one of the best destinations in the region to spend an inexpensive and fun-packed day. A small city with a life of its own, the San Jose Flea Market currently includes a farmer's market that's 1/4 mile long; an average of 3,000 vendor spaces weekly; 15 snack bars; 30 food, fruit and beverage carts; and a FunZone with a vintage carousel, mini-Ferris wheel, and playground with inflatable slides. More than three million people visit the San Jose Flea Market annually. Learn more about the San Jose Flea Market at www.sjfm.com.

About Borelli Investment Company—Now in its 62nd year in business, Borelli Investment Company is one of the oldest commercial real estate firms serving the Santa Clara Valley, Central Valley and Sacramento areas. The company provides a full range of commercial real estate services — from development and asset management to land sales and property management services — currently entitling over 3,000 lots — as well as general contracting through its SiliconX Construction affiliate. More information about Borelli Investment Company's services may be obtained by calling (408) 453-4700 or visiting www.borellli.com. For more details on sales and leasing opportunities at Market Park San Jose, visit www.marketparksanjose.com.
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  #139  
Old Posted Jul 13, 2017, 9:44 PM
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https://www.bizjournals.com/sanjose/...998&j=78544451

Adobe plans to double San Jose workforce with downtown campus expansion
Jul 13, 2017, 11:40am PDT Updated Jul 13, 2017, 1:35pm PDT
INDUSTRIES & TAGS Commercial Real Estate, Technology
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Adobe Systems is slated to buy a parcel of land in downtown San Jose that the company said will eventually hold a fourth office tower, growing its already massive, three-building downtown headquarters.

The new tower will have capacity for about 3,000 employees, more than doubling its current workforce in the city, which today sits at about 2,500 workers.

Adobe Systems Inc., the world's biggest maker of graphic design programs, has called downtown San Jose home more than two decades ago. The company has a three-building campus located at 345 Park Ave. and plans to add a fourth building at 333 W. San Fernando St.
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Adobe Systems Inc., the world's biggest maker of graphic design programs, has called… more

Adobe (Nasdaq:ADBE) announced Thursday that it's in contract to buy the parcel at 333 W. San Fernando St. from Wolff Urban Development and JP DiNapoli Cos. The groups have not released a purchase price.

Wolff and DiNapoli have already gone through the entitlement process to get a major office development approved for the site. Late last year, the city of San Jose put the final stamp of approval on an 18-story mixed-use tower with more than 700,000 square feet of retail and office space and both underground and above-ground parking. The glass-encased building has a distinct design, with cutout decks for outdoor gathering spaces and ground-level retail.

In an interview last year, Lew Wolff, chairman and CEO of Wolff Urban Development, told the Business Journal that distinctive as the building design is, the proposal would potentially be a placeholder to get the entitlement process moving in hopes of securing a tenant or buyer for the property.

“We like it [the design] and we hope someone else does, but if they have a different approach we won’t turn them down,” he said in an interview with the Business Journal at the time.

In a blog post Thursday morning, Adobe said many of the specifics for the now development are still in the works, but promised to share more details early next year.

“Expanding our facilities will allow us to hire additional talent to research and build products, serve our customers and continue to grow across virtually every part of our business,” Donna Morris, executive vice president of customer and employee experience at Adobe, said in the blog post. “We’re moving forward on the planning and building process as quickly as we can.”

Like Adobe, Wolff and DiNapoli are no strangers to downtown office development. The two have developed Park Center Plaza, which is now known as CityView Plaza, the San Jose Hilton and the Almaden Financial Plaza.

In a statement provided to the Business Journal Thursday, John DiNapoli, president at JP DiNapoli Cos. praised Wolff and his father Phil, who is the director at DiNapoli Cos., for their efforts in the city's downtown core.

"Lew and my father led redevelopment of the Central Business District when others turned their backs on downtown San Jose," he said, noting that those efforts helped to attract the Adobe expansion that would "add another vital element to Downtown San Jose."

And indeed, for San Jose, this is another big win in a series of major announcements in the last couple months.

In June, Google announced it was looking to build between 6 million and 8 million square feet in a mixed-use campus in downtown, near the Diridon Transit Station. The city is currently working out a deal with the Mountain View-based tech giant to buy a handful of key parcels in the area.

Last week, downtown San Jose saw a major milestone when the building at 303 Almaden sold for $80.15 millio n, or a record $509 per square foot for the area.

And while downtown San Jose has seen numerous tries at a renaissance in past years, none have stuck the way many hoped.

That might be changing with the recent attention the 10th largest city in the U.S. has been getting this year, paired with an upcoming building boom that will bring hundreds of thousands of square feet of commercial space to the downtown core, alongside more than 6,000 units in the coming years, if everything in the pipeline comes to fruition.

But Adobe has had faith in downtown for years. The company was the first major tech group to buy up real estate more than two decades ago when they placed their three-building, 900,000-square-foot office complex at 345 Park Ave., which is across the street at West San Fernando Street, from where Adobe plans to expand.

“We’re thrilled to see many months of work with Adobe and its partners culminate in this announcement of Adobe’s bold expansion of their global headquarters in San Jose, further enhancing Downtown’s burgeoning momentum as Silicon Valley’s urban center,” Mayor Sam Liccardo said in a statement Thursday. “We applaud Adobe for its catalytic role in driving innovation in the Valley over the last quarter century, and we thank its employees for their strong ethos of corporate responsibility which has made the company a wonderful community partner, and a global leader in sustainability.”
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  #140  
Old Posted Jul 13, 2017, 10:20 PM
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Originally Posted by Bwin517 View Post
https://www.bizjournals.com/sanjose/...998&j=78544451

Adobe plans to double San Jose workforce with downtown campus expansion
Jul 13, 2017, 11:40am PDT Updated Jul 13, 2017, 1:35pm PDT
INDUSTRIES & TAGS Commercial Real Estate, Technology
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Janice Bitters
Commercial Real Estate Reporter
Silicon Valley Business Journal
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Adobe Systems is slated to buy a parcel of land in downtown San Jose that the company said will eventually hold a fourth office tower, growing its already massive, three-building downtown headquarters.

The new tower will have capacity for about 3,000 employees, more than doubling its current workforce in the city, which today sits at about 2,500 workers.

Adobe Systems Inc., the world's biggest maker of graphic design programs, has called downtown San Jose home more than two decades ago. The company has a three-building campus located at 345 Park Ave. and plans to add a fourth building at 333 W. San Fernando St.
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Adobe Systems Inc., the world's biggest maker of graphic design programs, has called… more

Adobe (Nasdaq:ADBE) announced Thursday that it's in contract to buy the parcel at 333 W. San Fernando St. from Wolff Urban Development and JP DiNapoli Cos. The groups have not released a purchase price.

Wolff and DiNapoli have already gone through the entitlement process to get a major office development approved for the site. Late last year, the city of San Jose put the final stamp of approval on an 18-story mixed-use tower with more than 700,000 square feet of retail and office space and both underground and above-ground parking. The glass-encased building has a distinct design, with cutout decks for outdoor gathering spaces and ground-level retail.

In an interview last year, Lew Wolff, chairman and CEO of Wolff Urban Development, told the Business Journal that distinctive as the building design is, the proposal would potentially be a placeholder to get the entitlement process moving in hopes of securing a tenant or buyer for the property.

“We like it [the design] and we hope someone else does, but if they have a different approach we won’t turn them down,” he said in an interview with the Business Journal at the time.

In a blog post Thursday morning, Adobe said many of the specifics for the now development are still in the works, but promised to share more details early next year.

“Expanding our facilities will allow us to hire additional talent to research and build products, serve our customers and continue to grow across virtually every part of our business,” Donna Morris, executive vice president of customer and employee experience at Adobe, said in the blog post. “We’re moving forward on the planning and building process as quickly as we can.”

Like Adobe, Wolff and DiNapoli are no strangers to downtown office development. The two have developed Park Center Plaza, which is now known as CityView Plaza, the San Jose Hilton and the Almaden Financial Plaza.

In a statement provided to the Business Journal Thursday, John DiNapoli, president at JP DiNapoli Cos. praised Wolff and his father Phil, who is the director at DiNapoli Cos., for their efforts in the city's downtown core.

"Lew and my father led redevelopment of the Central Business District when others turned their backs on downtown San Jose," he said, noting that those efforts helped to attract the Adobe expansion that would "add another vital element to Downtown San Jose."

And indeed, for San Jose, this is another big win in a series of major announcements in the last couple months.

In June, Google announced it was looking to build between 6 million and 8 million square feet in a mixed-use campus in downtown, near the Diridon Transit Station. The city is currently working out a deal with the Mountain View-based tech giant to buy a handful of key parcels in the area.

Last week, downtown San Jose saw a major milestone when the building at 303 Almaden sold for $80.15 millio n, or a record $509 per square foot for the area.

And while downtown San Jose has seen numerous tries at a renaissance in past years, none have stuck the way many hoped.

That might be changing with the recent attention the 10th largest city in the U.S. has been getting this year, paired with an upcoming building boom that will bring hundreds of thousands of square feet of commercial space to the downtown core, alongside more than 6,000 units in the coming years, if everything in the pipeline comes to fruition.

But Adobe has had faith in downtown for years. The company was the first major tech group to buy up real estate more than two decades ago when they placed their three-building, 900,000-square-foot office complex at 345 Park Ave., which is across the street at West San Fernando Street, from where Adobe plans to expand.

“We’re thrilled to see many months of work with Adobe and its partners culminate in this announcement of Adobe’s bold expansion of their global headquarters in San Jose, further enhancing Downtown’s burgeoning momentum as Silicon Valley’s urban center,” Mayor Sam Liccardo said in a statement Thursday. “We applaud Adobe for its catalytic role in driving innovation in the Valley over the last quarter century, and we thank its employees for their strong ethos of corporate responsibility which has made the company a wonderful community partner, and a global leader in sustainability.”
Do you think they'll build the 333 W. San Fernando plan from Wolfe and DiNapoli, or start from scratch, I guess I haven't been keeping up with the company for the last 3-4 years their stock has been booming. Based on their 3 towers at Adobe HQ they will likely build a tower as tall as those. I wish there were a better way to deal with the parking situation though. Like adding to the existing garage behind the lot.
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