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  #661  
Old Posted Oct 26, 2023, 3:51 PM
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‘Death spiral’: It’s getting obscenely expensive to build housing in San Jose
New report shows how a huge jump in construction prices are stymying projects

By GABRIEL GRESCHLER | ggreschler@bayareanewsgroup.com | Bay Area News Group
PUBLISHED: October 26, 2023 at 6:15 a.m. | UPDATED: October 26, 2023 at 6:38 a.m.

It’s no surprise that building housing in San Jose isn’t cheap, but this year is shattering records for construction costs in the nation’s 12th-largest city.

A new report commissioned by San Jose officials finds the residential development landscape for both market rate and affordable projects “bleak” as builders face “numerous challenges” due to enormous economic pressures, including historically high interest rates, soaring construction material and labor costs and other inflation-related issues.

Buried in the study is an astounding figure: The cost of building a single unit of affordable housing in San Jose over the past year exploded by 24 percent, from $757,900 to $938,700 — a three-fold jump compared to relatively routine annual increases over the last decade and a half. Compared to other Bay Area counties such as San Francisco and Alameda, San Jose’s prices are 26 percent higher per unit, a figure attributed to a shortage in the labor market and differences in wage structures, the report found.

https://datawrapper.dwcdn.net/npsM6/2/

For the second year in a row, the report looked at the cost feasibility of five different types of properties across San Jose — and none of them penciled out.

When considering the construction costs of 5-to-22-story market-rate housing projects anywhere in the city, the report concluded that potential developers stand to lose hundreds of thousands of dollars in every instance. Meanwhile, rent costs have plateaued or even declined across the region, leaving new projects in the red. The city’s study found that even if rents increased by five percent or construction costs decreased by five percent, it still wouldn’t make a major difference.

The worsening climate for construction comes as housing affordability and homelessness remain top of mind for Bay Area residents. In a poll conducted by this news organization this month, 75 percent of the region’s registered voters think homelessness is going in the wrong direction.

Nanci Klein, the city’s head of economic development, said this year’s report can be narrowed down to a simple phrase.

“Worse than last year,” said Klein, who joked the study could have just been those four words. “Unless something crazy changes, we’re not going to get much development, housing or commercial.”

According to CoStar, an international real estate analytics company, not a single market-rate apartment project broke ground during the first half of this year in Silicon Valley. Rising construction costs have also hit transportation projects — notably San Jose’s BART extension, which has seen its estimated price tag nearly double over the last three years to $12.2 billion, and its target date delayed another three years to a 2036 opening.

Those involved in both affordable and market-rate housing projects said interest rates — which are at a 20-year high — remain the key stumbling block in a long line of dominos that have constrained development.

“Interest rates have really shut down the capital markets,” said Shawn Milligan, a San Jose-based developer. “You can’t borrow at 9 or 10 percent and underwrite a project. It’s impossible. It was possible when interest rates were three percent. It’s kind of turned everything upside down.”

This has created a vicious cycle, said Louis Mirante, vice president of public policy at the Bay Area Council.

“The fewer projects, the less labor there is,” he said. “The less labor there is, the fewer projects there are. That death spiral is going on.”

But there are other, less obvious issues stymying developers, the report found. Monthly operating costs for developers have spiked because of rising insurance rates that have sparked a crisis across the state, especially for those living in wooded areas who face wildfire dangers. Some homeowners have even had their coverage plans canceled. Developers also said layered on top of the insurance rates are difficulties getting projects linked to utilities, with some waiting months for Pacific Gas & Electric to get them hooked up with electricity.

...

Can the problem be fixed? Developers and others involved in construction said interest rates will have to go down — and city officials said they are exploring a variety of different levers it can pull to help ease the situation. But the options are extremely limited.

Even if San Jose wiped away all of its fees associated with starting a project, the results would be minimal, this year’s report found. And that could also cause issues with transportation and park infrastructure, which rely on this funding stream. Klein said they’re exploring other options, such as reviewing construction-defect laws.

But what would make the biggest difference, she said, would be a tweak to the California Environmental Quality Act, which critics have long blamed for holding up housing projects.

“If we could get rid of CEQA or substantially change CEQA, that would save a whole lot of money and a whole lot of legal fees,” said Klein.
https://www.siliconvalley.com/2023/1...g-in-san-jose/
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  #662  
Old Posted Oct 26, 2023, 3:53 PM
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The above article includes a couple of construction photo updates for 600 South First Street (Garden Gate Tower).





https://www.siliconvalley.com/2023/1...g-in-san-jose/
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  #663  
Old Posted Nov 2, 2023, 3:27 PM
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Icon has been updated from 22-story office tower to 26-story residential. Echo remains 27-story residential.

Quote:
New Renderings For Residential Iteration Of Icon/Echo, Downtown San Jose



BY: ANDREW NELSON 5:30 AM ON NOVEMBER 2, 2023

Urban Catalyst has purchased the final parcel needed for the Icon/Echo master plan in Downtown San Jose. The sale comes just over a month after the developer revealed plans to change the office component to housing, increasing the potential housing capacity from a few hundred to over one thousand units. New renderings shared by Urban Catalyst provide a preliminary glimpse at the design.

While Urban Catalyst has been public about its plan for a residential version of the Icon Tower, an application has not been submitted to the city. At this preliminary stage, the new design is subject to change. Plans are expected to be submitted by the end of the year.

The initial plan saw BDE Architecture responsible for designing the 27-story Echo and WRNS responsible for the 22-story Icon office tower. Now, BDE Architecture is responsible for the whole complex. Urban Catalyst emphasizes that the new renderings are subject to change. Massing and scale appear to remain the same, though both facades have been redesigned. The residential Icon tower will stand 26 floors tall with an articulated skin, setbacks, and open decks. The Echo Tower facade has been changed to match the new tower.

In a press release, Urban Catalyst has shared that it is currently “sourcing debt and equity financing for Echo, the development’s first phase, and studying the potential to re-entitle Icon’s commercial office phase to residential use, which may include up to 600 or more residential units to be built in one or two phases on the existing office phase’s footprint.”

Last Friday, Urban Catalyst purchased the 26-spot parking lot at 60 North Third Street from Town Park Towers L.P. for $3.3 million. The seller, Sequoia Living, operates a senior living tower on the same block as Icon/Echo. The developer purchased the remaining property sites between 2019 and 2022 across three transactions for $41.4 million. The 60 North 3rd parking lot will remain until the groundbreaking of phase two, and the project will provide dedicated parking for residents of Town Park Towers throughout construction and once complete.

Josh Burroughs, Chief Operating Officer at Urban Catalyst, said of the new acquisition, “This is a win-win where we can provide for and expand the benefits to Town Park Towers residents while pursuing the goals of San Jose’s general plan and urban vibrancy.” Along with the parking, a shared communal backyard will triple the senior housing’s patio size.
https://sfyimby.com/2023/11/new-rend...-san-jose.html
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  #664  
Old Posted Nov 2, 2023, 3:35 PM
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  #665  
Old Posted Nov 2, 2023, 3:51 PM
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Quote:
Adobe officially completes and opens eye-catching downtown San Jose bridge
Bridge spans city street and connects Adobe campus towers



By GEORGE AVALOS | gavalos@bayareanewsgroup.com | Bay Area News Group
PUBLISHED: November 2, 2023 at 5:30 a.m. | UPDATED: November 2, 2023 at 8:39 a.m.

SAN JOSE — Adobe has opened an eye-catching new bridge that connects the tech titan’s new Founders Tower with its other downtown San Jose office highrises, an overhead link that also completes Adobe’s campus.

The bridge over West San Fernando Street in downtown San Jose features artwork that symbolizes the link between the orchards that dotted the Santa Clara Valley and the cutting-edge innovations that Adobe creates.

San Jose-based Adobe also announced that Adobe Foundation is launching a fresh round of grants totaling $1.8 million that’s being provided to 11 organizations in San Jose.

Adobe executives believe the new bridge goes beyond a completed construction project.

“The opening of this bridge is more than a brick-and-mortar milestone for Adobe,” said Gloria Chen, Adobe’s chief people officer. “When we opened the doors earlier this year to this magnificent new Founders Tower, it was a symbol of our ongoing commitment to a vibrant, innovative, and creative hometown of San Jose.”

Adobe’s bridge and completed office complex also represent a milestone in downtown San Jose’s attempt to recuperate from the brutal economic maladies that are the after-effects of the government-imposed business lockdowns to curb the spread of the coronavirus.

“Downtown San Jose is bouncing back largely because of thoughtful and incredible employers like Adobe and a thriving arts and cultural scene in our downtown that has been sustained by Adobe,” San Jose Mayor Matt Mahan said during remarks before the ribbon-cutting for the new bridge.

...

Adobe executives also took note of the multiple artworks on the side of the Founders Tower as well as on the bridge itself.

One artwork begins on the street level below the bridge and symbolizes roots rising to the bridge. On the bridge, artwork that resembles trees completes the roots and trees symbolism.

“Creativity Blooms” is the name of the soaring artwork, which was created by New York City-based husband-and-wife duo Nancy Hou and Josh de Sousa.

The artwork, according to Ekman, is meant to recall the fact that the downtown area and much of the Santa Clara Valley were once filled with orchards that now have largely given way to the cutting-edge and go-go tech world of Silicon Valley.

“It is an installation that starts on the street and bursts into color on top of the bridge,” Chen said. “It reflects San Jose’s agricultural history and how Adobe’s tools unleash creative potential and imagination.”

...

“There is no doubt that downtown San Jose has its issues, but San Jose is telling a different story,” Kalra said in remarks before the ribbon-cutting. “Part of the reason for that is the dedication of companies like Adobe that over a quarter center have invested in our downtown.”

Yet the new tower and its connecting bridge also serve as a reminder that Adobe’s presence is a big-time economic boon for San Jose’s urban core, according to Mayor Mahan.

“With this new tower, Adobe’s presence is pushing 7,000 employees,” Mahan said. “It’s hard to overstate Adobe’s impact on our downtown.”
https://www.siliconvalley.com/2023/1...my-jobs-covid/
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  #666  
Old Posted Nov 2, 2023, 7:02 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by homebucket View Post
Man.... all projects in San Jose take F O R E V E R to even start. It's really pissing me off. There's legit no activity going on at all except for Garden Gate. Do we SERIOUSLY need to wait for BART to be built in downtown to see a huge BOOM

Anyways, I hope they get this approved and the new, final design will be jaw dropping and not boring. I love driving on 880 south and seeing the skyline as I'm heading towards Valley Fair. This will definitely be a nice sight when completed.

Also 1000+ more units in DTSJ? Probably 3000 more people living there? Night life would BOOM when it's finally built

==

Also, I'm looking forward to walking on Adobe's new bridge! Now THIS is a very nice welcome to the downtown core. We FINALLY have a nice piece to make it more appealing
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  #667  
Old Posted Nov 2, 2023, 9:23 PM
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I can speak on this from experience as well. I was (relatively) recently working on a tentative design proposal for a 24-story mixed use project in downtown SJ. It was originally shelved in 2020 due to Covid and brought back by the developers in Q2 2023. It was recently shelved again as the numbers no longer penciled out.

It's a shame that the localized construction cost issues are combining with the national downward trend in commercial real estate to stanch the flow of projects. I really am looking forward to the day when BART extends under DTSJ, but sadly construction prices are hitting there too.


Also, I don't know if anyone else saw this, but a zillow listing from SJ went viral last week. 1.5 million for an unrehabilitated, still-contaminated meth house! Insanity!

https://www.nbcbayarea.com/news/loca...-sale/3351316/
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  #668  
Old Posted Nov 7, 2023, 5:15 PM
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Some DTSJ updates + random shots:











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  #669  
Old Posted Nov 28, 2023, 8:49 PM
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More photo updates plz. Someone check out Japan Town and take random pics of Valleyfair and the retail!
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  #670  
Old Posted Dec 11, 2023, 6:07 PM
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I'm back home for 2 weeks!



















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  #671  
Old Posted Dec 11, 2023, 9:27 PM
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Originally Posted by gillynova View Post
I'm back home for 2 weeks!
Thanks for the great photo-update! Glad we get to steal you back from the Austin sub-forum for a few weeks
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  #672  
Old Posted Dec 11, 2023, 10:30 PM
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Welcome back, gilly! And thanks for sharing the photo update.
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  #673  
Old Posted Dec 12, 2023, 4:02 PM
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Stealing me from the Austin-sub for a few weeks haha. Glad to be back guys! Here's some more photos:
--
Downtown San Jose at night



I was hoping the new mini-golf spot was finished by the time I was home but it’s not even close








Christmas in the Park





There’s legit no one living in one of the Slavery Tower buildings… and on the one that is occupied, no one lives in the top 6 floors?? That’s really weird.





The new bar/restaurant building is still not occupied. I think it would be a good fit and perfect extension of San Pedro. Waiting for the day it gets occupied

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  #674  
Old Posted Jan 2, 2024, 9:18 PM
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San Jose's Japantown:









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  #675  
Old Posted Jan 2, 2024, 9:29 PM
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Garden Tower (San Jose)



Random

















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  #676  
Old Posted Jan 3, 2024, 2:41 PM
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Breaking down the "San Jose Real Estate Death Spiral"

Quote:
Originally Posted by homebucket View Post
Thanks for posting, Homebucket! The article definitely hit on the major points associated with developing in California. It felt helpful in laying out the aspects representing the different buckets of real estate development interests that are converging to make development difficult.

It's been helpful for me to focus my energies at the right governmental altitude in order to get a better handle on these issues effecting housing development. Breaking down some of the thinking here:
  • Interest rates [Federal issue] – And the Fed is not assoc. with a political party, so it's just doing its thing...

    CEQA(!) [State issue] – We all know this law's contemporary usage has mainly been to stop development (which is your "favorite" CEQA abuse? Mine = UC Berkeley student housing (students = noise pollution)), but Scott Wiener, Gavin, et al have made movement to remove challenges to the law, especially in our existing urban centers. More to be done there though.

    Housing affordability and homelessness vs. going rent [State + Local issue] – From all the available research, building more market rate housing decreases housing costs overall (either through actually decreasing rents because of greater supply, or preventing the rate of rent increases, bc of the ample supply), but don't know the context of if the market rate rents are more attractive to the 30% or less of median monthly take-home pay for the area, and the overall deficit of homes needed in the San Jose area to begin with. As for homelessness, that is almost a different housing product / tier, but low-moderate priced apartments do get more affordable with supply of market rate units–which may help the working homeless that we likely don't realize are unhoused), but the truly indigent–the one's we are seeing in the streets–need to get inside, but as we see, we've made that endeavor expensive

    Fees (parks, infrastructure) [Local issue] – These local 'impact fees' have been studied and found that they make new construction much more expensive and make the funding of park improvements and infrastructure improvements dependent on if there is real estate development...which is, as we can see, a non-predictable activity, so to have city services reliant on an unpredictable, private sector activity is not ideal.

    "...shortage in the labor market and differences in wage structures..." [Local issue?] – I assume they mean a shortage in the construction labor market? And 'wage structures', I don't know what that may be referring to.
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It's a Sophie's Choice, really...
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  #677  
Old Posted Jan 4, 2024, 5:36 PM
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Quote:
Westbank Considers Converting Bank Of Italy Tower To Housing



BY: ANDREW NELSON 5:30 AM ON JANUARY 4, 2024

Westbank and Urban Community have submitted new plans to convert Downtown San Jose’s iconic Bank of Italy tower into housing. The adaptive reuse of the office tower would create well over a hundred apartments across most of the 13-story building. The filing comes as the region struggles with record-high office vacancy rates.

Details about the Bank of Italy conversion were first reported by George Avalos for the Bay Area News Group. Avalos reports that the two developers plan to create between 125 to 150 residential units across the upper floors. This will include two penthouse units on the top floor. For pedestrians walking along Fountain Alley, renovations to the low-slung annex will create terraces on the second and third floors. One of those terraces could be used by a restaurant for outdoor dining.

The 1904-founded Bank of Italy, now known as Bank of America, would occupy the San Jose tower, designed by Henry A. Milton in 1926, up through 1970. Westbank and Urban Community had already been pursuing renovations to the tower designed by the world-renowned architecture studio Bjarke Ingels Group to collaborate with RMW for interior work and an eye-catching exterior greenery-wrapped stairwell. BIG is still involved with the building, though the residential project no longer requires the external stairwell, and the historic elements of the facade will remain preserved. The black metal-clad design for the annex, which extends from Fountain Alley to East Santa Clara Street, has remained the same.
https://sfyimby.com/2024/01/westbank...o-housing.html
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  #678  
Old Posted Jan 4, 2024, 5:40 PM
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Quote:
Construction start for San Jose housing tower is a “few months” away: developer



By GEORGE AVALOS | gavalos@bayareanewsgroup.com | Bay Area News Group
PUBLISHED: January 4, 2024 at 5:30 a.m. | UPDATED: January 4, 2024 at 5:34 a.m.

SAN JOSE — A housing tower that would produce several hundred residences in downtown San Jose could break ground during the first half of 2024, offering some rays of hope amid a gloomy Bay Area real estate market.

The project is known as Orchard Residential and would be built on the site of the former Bo Town restaurant in downtown San Jose’s trendy and hip SoFA district, according to one of the project’s developers.

...

The highrise is expected to contain 540 residential units, documents on file with city planners show.
https://www.siliconvalley.com/2024/0...-a-few-months/
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  #679  
Old Posted Jan 22, 2024, 5:29 PM
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The specs for 600 South First St:
- 23 floors, 252 ft
- 336 units (39 studios, 218 1BR, 79 2BR)
- 28 of the units will be affordable
- 5,655 sq ft for retail

The site:
https://maps.app.goo.gl/FxEbfxYta4FRefXK8

Quote:
Construction Tops Out For The Fay, Downtown San Jose



BY: ANDREW NELSON 5:30 AM ON JANUARY 22, 2024

Construction has topped out for the Fay at 600 South First Street in Downtown San Jose. The 23-story project rises over I-280 as a prominent southernmost tower in the urban core. Its over three hundred apartments are expected to open up in early 2025. Morro is the project developer.

C2K Architecture is responsible for the glass-skin curtainwall design. Renderings show the podium base distinguished by an articulated horizontal red-clad framing along the second floor, where residents will gain access to future amenities like co-working spaces, a fitness center, a music room, and a lounge. The rooftop deck will be furnished with a small pool and outdoor seating.

The 252-foot tall structure will yield 366,840 square feet, with 273,720 square feet for residential use, 5,655 square feet for retail, and 51,400 square feet for parking. Once complete, Morro will open 336 apartments, including ​​28 affordable units. Apartment sizes will vary, with 39 studios, 218 one-bedrooms, and 79 two-bedrooms.

Morro is a London-based developer with two existing properties in Guilford and Boston. The firm is connected to Scape, the original developer behind 600 South First Street. While Scape specializes in student and co-living units, Morro will provide multi-family apartments.
https://sfyimby.com/2024/01/construc...-san-jose.html
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  #680  
Old Posted Jan 22, 2024, 5:30 PM
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