The Mercury News

Sobrato pushes ahead with striking San Jose office tower

Legendary developmen­t company aims to ‘redefine’ San Jose's skyline

- By George Avalos gavalos @bayareanew­sgroup.com

SAN JOSE >> A new downtown San Jose office high-rise that features four towers designed to coalesce into a single striking complex will “really redefine” the skyline of the nation’s 10th-largest city, the project’s developer said.

The Market Towers complex, proposed by The Sobrato Organizati­on, will bring 585,000 square feet

of office and retail space to downtown San Jose at the corner of South Market and West San Carlos streets, according to a project web site set up by developer Sobrato.

“This is such a unique product,” said Chase Lyman, Sobrato’s vice president for acquisitio­ns and leasing. “It will really redefine the San Jose skyline.”

When constructi­on is complete, the building, at first glance, is expected to have the appearance of four separate office towers. In reality, Lyman said, they are actually merged together into a single high rise.

“This is one building,” Lyman said. “The optics will make it almost seem as if it’s four different office towers. The architectu­re will be timeless.”

The 19-story building will include 568,000 square feet of office space, 16,000 square feet of ground-floor retail, and 23,000 square feet of rooftop terraces and gardens, according to the project’s web site.

“We will have massive sky gardens in this project,” Lyman said. In addition, the

layout of the four towers and the spaces between them is expected to allow natural light to penetrate to virtually all sections of each floor in the complex.

Despite the optimism conveyed by Sobrato executives regarding the Market Towers complex, it’s not certain that the developer will pursue the project without a tenant that has agreed to rent the property

ahead of its completion.

“We don’t know if we are going to build this on spec,” Lyman said.

Neverthele­ss, if built, Market Towers would serve as a crucial link between the core of the downtown, the cluster of hotels in the vicinity, and the up-andcoming South First Area, or SoFA district, of downtown San Jose. Now a parking lot, this future site for Market Towers totals 1.5 acres.

Adobe recently launched a dramatic expansion of its three-building headquarte­rs campus in downtown

San Jose by beginning constructi­on of a fourth office tower at an adjacent site.

Google has proposed a transit-oriented community of office buildings, homes, shops, restaurant­s, amenities, and open spaces on the western edges of downtown San Jose near the Diridon train station.

For these and other reasons, downtown San Jose appears poised to start to turn the corner, in Lyman’s view.

“It’s the stuff everybody has been talking about, the things at the Diridon Station

area, all the new residentia­l that’s being developed, you have retail that continues to improve, the transit upgrades, whether Caltrain electrific­ation or future BART,” Lyman said.

All of these changes have fundamenta­lly changed the once-sleepy nature of downtown San Jose, in Lyman’s view.

“This is an urban area now,” Lyman said. “We are really bullish on downtown San Jose.”

 ?? ARQUITECTO­NICA RENDERING ?? The Market Towers rooftop would offer 23,000square feet of terraces and gardens.
ARQUITECTO­NICA RENDERING The Market Towers rooftop would offer 23,000square feet of terraces and gardens.

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