Oroville Mercury-Register

Google to invest billions, Bay Area gets big chunk

- By George Avalos

Google intends to invest more than $3.5 billion in California — including a big chunk in the Bay Area — as the search giant pushes ahead with a post-coronaviru­s expansion on a wide scale, the company said Thursday.

The tech titan says it is pushing ahead with big projects in Mountain View, Sunnyvale, downtown San Jose, in Los Angeles and elsewhere.

“We are not letting our foot off the gas,” Kent Walker, Google’s chief legal officer, said during a news conference in downtown San Jose to sketch out the company’s investment plans statewide.

All of the $3.5 billion represents new funding, including some for new projects and some for existing projects, a Google spokespers­on said. The company didn’t provide a breakdown.

“We are doubling down on our investment,” Walker said.

As some other tech companies have offered employees the option to stay fully remote in the wake of the coronaviru­s pandemic and scaled back office space, Google asked workers to begin returning to the office this month and has shown no signs of scaling back new office projects.

Among the major Google projects in the Bay Area:

— Bay View, an eye-catching complex in Mountain View, opening this year.

— Charleston East, a visually dramatic campus in Mountain View, nearly complete.

— The company’s firstever mass-timber building in Sunnyvale, opening this year.

— Middlefiel­d Park, a Mountain View mixed-use proposed project that includes 1,900 homes.

— North Bayshore mixeduse proposal in Mountain View, a project that includes 7,000 homes.

— Caribbean campus in northern Sunnyvale, now under constructi­on.

— Landings campus in Mountain View. Constructi­on is beginning this year on this site.

Yet perhaps the most ambitious project on Google’s drawing boards at present is the Downtown West developmen­t near the Diridon train station in downtown San Jose.

Google’s mixed-use neighborho­od there will consist of offices, homes, shops, restaurant­s, entertainm­ent hubs, cultural loops and other amenities, including open spaces.

The setting of Thursday’s event, a prominent office building at 450 W. Santa Clara St. in San Jose that was developed by local real estate executive Chuck Toeniskoet­ter, served as a reminder of Google’s intentions to push ahead with the Downtown West project.

“We are in a building today that will be a cornerston­e of the Downtown West neighborho­od that we are developing,” Walker said.

The developmen­t is expected to create 4,000 homes, including 1,000 affordable units, along with 7 million square feet of office space. Google anticipate­s it will employ up to 25,000 or workers in the new neighborho­od.

“Through Downtown West, we will welcome thousands of new jobs, affordable housing, and immense benefits to our small businesses,” San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo said Thursday.

Mayor Liccardo recalled how he was approached by Google’s top real estate executive about the company’s interest in creating a new neighborho­od in downtown San Jose.

“I told Google the misfortune is that we’re broke and we don’t have anything to give you,” Mayor Liccardo said. “Google told us they didn’t want anything from us.”

Some residents protested the tech company’s San Jose efforts, voicing concerns about the project fueling a rise in housing prices, traffic and displaceme­nt of residents. But the mayor said he’s impressed by the various ways that Google has been eager to provide community benefits to San Jose and to work with local groups to ensure the Downtown West developmen­t is what local residents seek.

“We are incredibly enthusiast­ic about this,” Liccardo said. “It’s more than just about the what with Google. It’s about the how. What Google is doing is extraordin­ary.”

In 2021, Google and the city of San Jose struck a deal whereby the city would receive $200 million from the search giant in community benefits.

The tech company also has provided a combined $500,000 for two key nonprofit endeavors in San Jose, Rep. Zoe Lofgren(DSan Jose) announced at the event.

PATH, People Assisting the Homeless, received $250,000 for the purchases of tech equipment to be used with the group’s 4th Street residentia­l developmen­t for formerly homeless people. And the proposed African American Cultural Center that would be part of a mixed-use developmen­t on The Alameda in San Jose received $250,000 from Google, Rep. Lofgren said.

 ?? CHRIS MCANNENY — HEATHERWIC­K STUDIO ?? Google’s Bay View campus in Mountain View on the grounds of the NASA Ames Research Center.
CHRIS MCANNENY — HEATHERWIC­K STUDIO Google’s Bay View campus in Mountain View on the grounds of the NASA Ames Research Center.

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