Almaden Resident

Affordable homes eyed at former Chuck E. Cheese San Jose site

Parcel’s appeal is size, for large developmen­t

- By George Avalos gavalos@bayareanew­sgroup.com Contact George Avalos at 408-859-5167.

SAN JOSE >> Nearly 200 affordable homes could sprout on the site of a now-closed Chuck E. Cheese family restaurant in San Jose, according to preliminar­y plans being reviewed by city planners.

Affirmed Housing is planning a 100% affordable residentia­l developmen­t on Kooser Road between Blossom Hill Road and Meridian Avenue, the plans show.

“There is not a lot of affordable housing in this area,” said Rob Wilkins, regional director of Northern California for Affirmed Housing. “It’s a great spot for affordable housing.”

The 1.6-acre site at 1371 Kooser Road is the location of a popular Chuck E. Cheese that closed its doors in 2020 amid the economic ravages unleashed by the deadly coronaviru­s.

“This is a high-resource area, with low poverty, good schools, good amenities nearby,” Wilkins said.

The amenities include restaurant­s and retail. Plus, the Almaden Station light rail stop on Coleman Avenue is within two miles of the proposed developmen­t site.

The property is also suitable because it is on a parcel that’s large enough for a new project.

“It is a vacant site, on an island of its own,” Wilkins said. “There are great place-making opportunit­ies.”

Some retail uses that wouldn’t be part of the developmen­t are adjacent and some shared parking arrangemen­ts are under discussion.

Another shuttered restaurant site in south San Jose is under considerat­ion for affordable developmen­t in the vicinity.

About a mile away at 1007 Blossom Hill Road, a developmen­t of 269 affordable homes is being considered on a 1.9-acre site where Fish Market had operated a popular seafood restaurant until coronaviru­s-linked economic woes forced it to close permanentl­y.

At the Chuck E. Cheese site on Kooser Road, the developers have obtained a contract to buy the property.

The developmen­t would be six stories high and would include on-site amenities such as a community room. The project also might include ground-floor retail.

The project’s developers, however, emphasized that the preliminar­y plans have been fashioned and filed primarily as a trial balloon to obtain early-stage observatio­ns and assessment­s from the community and city planners.

“The plans could change based on community feedback and the city review,” Wilkins said. “We will go out to the community. A lot of what we do and how we operate is we conduct a lot of outreach to the community.”

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