The Mercury News Weekend

Adobe’s downtown S.J. office tower would reach new heights

Potentiall­y 3,000 employees could work at the complex located at 333 W. San Fernando St.

- By George Avalos gavalos@bayareanew­sgroup.com Contact George Avalos at 408-8595167.

SANJOSE » Adobe Systems, in a move that will bring thousands of additional employees of the tech giant into downtown San Jose, filed plans Thursday with city officials for a striking new office tower next to its existing three-building headquarte­rs campus.

Potentiall­y, 3,000 Adobe employees could work at the gleaming office building, which is being called the North Tower and would sprout at a cleared- out lot on the north side of the company’s current office complex. The building would be as much as 650,000 square feet in size, planning documents show.

“As the first technology company to build offices in downtown San Jose, we’re excited to be a part of the city’s expanding skyline,” said Jonathan Francom, Adobe’s vice president for employee workplace solutions.

San Jose-based Adobe on Thursday submitted an update for an already fully approved developmen­t that provides specifics about the company’s plans for the tower. The developmen­t site is at 333 W. San Fernando St., on the east side of Highway 87.

“The building will be 18 stories tall with a bridge that will connect the new tower to the company’s existing headquarte­rs,” Francom said in comments emailed to this news organizati­on.

During an interview in February, Scott of global Ekman, real Adobe’s estate, estimated senior director that constructi­on on the tower could begin sometime in 2019. He told ameeting of the Silicon Valley Leadership Group that Adobe intends to hire hundreds of people a year to work in downtown San Jose.

Adobe moved its head offices to downtown San Jose in 1996.

“This new tower builds on the investment we made 20 years ago to the city of San Jose,” Francom said.

It’s also a huge increase in Adobe’s presence in downtown San Jose. According to estimates from the company in February, Adobe at the time employed roughly 3,500 workers in downtown San Jose and another 1,500 in San Francisco. In effect, Adobe uses Caltrain as a shuttle between its two Bay Area employment hubs.

“We’re excited that we’ll have capacity for an additional 3,000 employees and to further contribute to San Jose’s continued urban developmen­t,” Francom said.

 ?? GENSLER ?? “The building will be 18stories tall with a bridge that will connect the new tower to the company’s existing headquarte­rs,” says Jonathan Francom, Adobe’s vice president for employee workplace solutions.
GENSLER “The building will be 18stories tall with a bridge that will connect the new tower to the company’s existing headquarte­rs,” says Jonathan Francom, Adobe’s vice president for employee workplace solutions.
 ?? BAYAREA NEWS GROUP ??
BAYAREA NEWS GROUP

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