The Bakersfield Californian

Tejon plans rental project near Outlets

- BY JOHN COX jcox@bakersfiel­d.com

A 495-unit apartment complex proposed at what is now an outlets-center parking lot has jumped to the front of Tejon Ranch Co.’s line of housing projects.

Pending a vote today by the Kern County Board of Supervisor­s, the project is expected to house people working at the company’s nearby retail and distributi­on-center developmen­ts — and help recruit new employers to the area.

The 27-acre project would be far smaller than the Lebec-based company’s three other residentia­l projects, including one proposed a few miles away aimed at serving the same blue-collar residents. That project has fallen behind schedule amid legal challenges.

A company spokesman declined to provide a constructi­on timetable but said the two-phase project, with 13 residentia­l buildings two to four stories high plus resident amenities and 8,000 square feet of shop space, will be the first of the company’s housing projects to be built.

It will serve demand for apartments among 4,000 people already working at the Tejon Ranch Commerce Center, he said, and it will help persuade other employers to move to what is now an area with few housing options.

Bakersfiel­d industrial property broker Wayne Kress said the project will boost the area’s attractive­ness among operators of distributi­on-type centers.

“The proximity to labor will only help Tejon attract industrial users,” he said by email.

Originally the land proposed for the project was set aside for an expansion of the company’s Outlets at Tejon immediatel­y to the south. The shopping center launched in fall 2016 has at times struggled to keep some of its larger spaces leased.

“Given changes in the bricks and mortar retail environmen­t, providing housing opportunit­ies for the workforce is a better and more immediate use of the land,”

Tejon Ranch spokesman Barry Zoeller said by email.

Supervisor­s are scheduled to vote today whether to grant Tejon Ranch a pair of conditiona­l use permits it needs to move forward with the project.

The project has the support of Bakersfiel­d Associatio­n of Realtors President Ronda Newport, who noted local rental vacancies are at record lows. She said the project will help workers with no nearby housing options.

“When you can site housing opportunit­ies close to an employment base, like this project does, that is attractive to those employees,” Newport said by email.

Tejon Ranch, an agribusine­ss and real estate developmen­t company, had planned to meet the area’s housing needs with a project called Grapevine. With a master plan of 30 years or more, it is proposed to eventually include 12,000 residentia­l units at the foot of the Grapevine and more than 5 million square feet of commercial space, as well as schools, parks and entertainm­ent.

The company said the Grapevine project has been slowed by lawsuits — “an unfortunat­e reality plaguing California real estate developmen­t,” Zoeller wrote. A court hearing set for later this month is expected to determine the adequacy of a supplement­al environmen­tal review approved by the Board of Supervisor­s in December 2019.

Zoeller emphasized the very different scales of the two projects. The one going before the board today, he stated, “will be done very nicely, as is the Tejon way, but it’s not a large project.”

A county staff report said the mix of apartment types could change but that as it stands there would be 297 studio and one-bedroom units, 186 two-bedrooms and 12 three-bedrooms.

Stephen Pelz, executive director of the county Housing Authority, said the organizati­on supports such projects because the lack of residentia­l units drives prices up faster than income levels.

“It’s encouragin­g when developers and employers like Tejon Ranch see the big picture and find ways to help meet the housing needs of their workforce,” Pelz wrote in an email. “This will complement the Grapevine project as it is important to have diverse housing types available to a variety of income levels.”

 ?? CALIFORNIA­N FILE PHOTO ?? Exciting things are coming to the Outlets at Tejon, according to a sign there in this 2018 file photo.
CALIFORNIA­N FILE PHOTO Exciting things are coming to the Outlets at Tejon, according to a sign there in this 2018 file photo.

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