The Mercury News

WeWork deepens its downtown San Jose ties with developer

- By George Avalos gavalos@bayareanew­sgroup.com

SAN JOSE >> WeWork has taken steps to quietly widen its involvemen­t in downtown San Jose through an alliance with busy developer Gary Dillabough on two more choice sites in the urban heart of the Bay Area’s largest city, according to public documents and property experts.

The latest downtown San Jose sites that have drawn WeWork’s financial involvemen­t are the Valley Title property and the Bo Town restaurant site, both located in the up-and-coming South First Area, or SoFA district.

Also involved in the Bo Town site: Bay Area developer Case Swenson and downtown property owner Richard Berg, who owns several parcels next to both the Valley Title and Bo Town lots.

To this point, co-working giant WeWork has displayed a widerangin­g interest in downtown San Jose sites, primarily in office towers such as the Bank of Italy high rise.

Matters could be changing. For the first time, WeWork has taken a financial stake in two downtown San Jose properties that would become major redevelopm­ent sites, potentiall­y featuring office and residentia­l towers, and adding shops and restaurant­s to the SoFA district. WeWork could not immediatel­y be reached for comment.

“This is a deeper plunge by WeWork than we have seen so far, a much deeper plunge,” said Mark Ritchie, president of Ritchie Commercial, a real estate firm. “They are getting involved with properties that could take five years to develop and cost hundreds of mil

lions of dollars to build.”

The co-working giant’s involvemen­t was revealed in documents that were filed July 9 with Santa Clara County officials. Dillabough declined to comment.

“WeWork’s entry into the downtown makes a lot of sense,” said Bob Staedler, principal executive with Silicon Valley Synergy, a landuse consultanc­y.

The company’s intensifie­d push comes as Google has proposed a huge transit village developmen­t near the Diridon train station, Adobe has launched a fourth office tower to expand its three-building headquarte­rs campus, and developers Jay Paul, Dillabough, and Urban Catalyst have been purchasing numerous properties downtown.

“The WeWork involvemen­t downtown keeps the momentum going with what Google, Adobe, Jay Paul, and Dillabough are doing,” Staedler said.

The respective owners of the Valley Title and Bo Town properties, groups led, in both cases, by Dillabough, obtained loans that used the two sites as collateral, documents on file with county officials show. The authorized person who signed for the borrower to activate the mortgages was Roni Bahar, who is WeWork’s director of developmen­t. In addition to the public records, sources familiar with the South Bay property market confirmed the WeWork connection to the sites.

One group headed by Dillabough paid $64 million in 2018 for the Valley Title lot that’s roughly bounded by East San Carlos, South First, East San Salvador, and South Second streets.

This month, a Dillabough-led group paid $15 million for Bo Town and two adjacent parking lots, a site that is near the corner of South Second and East San Salvador streets.

The Valley Title site is currently envisioned by Dillabough as a millionsqu­are-foot complex of office towers, residentia­l high-rises, shops, and restaurant­s. No developmen­t proposals have emerged for Bo Town.

“WeWork is getting financiall­y invested in what would be a mixed-use village that could involve both the WeWork and the WeLive concepts,” Ritchie said.

 ?? PHOTO BY GEORGE AVALOS ?? San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo and WeWork executive Elton Kwok cut a ribbon in WeWork’s new offices at 333 W. San Carlos St. in San Jose.
PHOTO BY GEORGE AVALOS San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo and WeWork executive Elton Kwok cut a ribbon in WeWork’s new offices at 333 W. San Carlos St. in San Jose.

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