Edmonton Journal

Silicon Valley to get massive complex

- Noah Buhayar

The developer of New York’s Hudson Yards is ready to build another massive office, housing and retail complex — this time about 4,800 kilometres to the west.

Related Cos. announced this week that it has started work on a 97-hectare site in Silicon Valley for what it says is one of the largest entitled developmen­ts in California history. Located just north of Levi’s Stadium, where the National Football League’s San Francisco 49ers play, the Santa Clara project will cost roughly US$8 billion, replacing a public golf course that sits atop a former landfill.

The developmen­t has long been planned — Related first announced it six years ago — and the fact that it’s just now getting underway speaks to the difficulti­es of building in a region that’s become infamous for its housing shortage and legal wrangling over growth.

But it’s also a testament to the robust Bay Area tech scene and demand for space that the company is embarking on a lengthy constructi­on process late into an economic boom.

When fully built, the project will have 502,000 square metres of offices, 700 hotel rooms, more than 1,600 apartments, and a retail, dining and entertainm­ent district, as well as a 30-acre park — all a short distance from public transit and adjacent to an industrial area that the city is converting to a residentia­l zone with room for as many as 4,500 units of housing.

Related named renowned architect Foster + Partners to lead design of the developmen­t’s first phases.

By creating an urban area rich with amenities, Related is betting that it’ll be able to draw the sorts of corporate tenants that increasing­ly see such perks as a key to attracting and retaining staff.

The developmen­t, expected to initially open in 2023, will also feature a range of office types, from loft-style spaces attractive to startups, to a zone that could accommodat­e a large company’s headquarte­rs.

“Room to grow is a big issue in Silicon Valley,” said Steve Eimer, Related’s executive vice-president in charge of the project. “Most of these companies want to put their flag down in a place where they don’t have to move.”

Whether a sleek master-planned community becomes more than just a playground for wealthy tech employees remains to be seen. Related’s Hudson Yards developmen­t — a US$25-billion mega-plex of office towers, residences and shopping areas built over former rail yards — has been met with similar criticism.

In general, creating authentic urban experience­s is very difficult in an area that’s developed all around the same time, said Margaret O’Mara, a professor at the University of Washington who’s studied the history of Silicon Valley.

Even so, she said, Related’s developmen­t is clearly “better use of land than a golf course” in a region that’s starved for housing.

Some of the residentia­l units at the property will be earmarked for people making less than 120 per cent of the area’s median income, Related said.

And, in a first for Northern California, the developer will be allowed to build housing on a site that used to be a landfill.

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