Rose Garden Resident

Google prepares for more work downtown

- By George Avalos gavalos @bayareanew­sgroup.com

Google plans to demolish part of the former Orchard Supply Hardware complex in downtown San Jose, a move that suggests the tech titan has not “forgotten” about its transit village project.

The upcoming bulldozing effort shows the search giant continues to conduct preliminar­y work ahead of an eventual — yet unknown — constructi­on start for its ambitious plans to create a new neighborho­od on the western edges of downtown San Jose.

“Demolition of this building will provide Google the flexibilit­y on how to use this developmen­t site in the future,” said Bob Staedler, president of Silicon Valley Synergy, a land-use consultanc­y, in an email to this news organizati­on.

Webcor, a veteran general contractor, has won the task of conducting the demolition of the older Orchard Supply Hardware store building on the site.

Google is eyeing the demolition of a structure at 720 W. San Carlos Street, which is an older section of the hardware store complex, according to a flyer that Webcor circulated Jan. 31 to neighbors of Google's proposed transit village, which is known as Downtown West.

“This work is scheduled to begin in February 2024 and be completed by late May 2024,” Webcor stated in a letter the veteran constructi­on company sent to residents of the area. “The work will be performed Monday through Friday from 7 a.m. to 5 p.m.”

A spokespers­on for Google confirmed the company's plans for the demolition effort.

“Performing this work now while there is less activity in the area will lower the impact to the neighborho­od,” Staedler said.

The search giant's downtown San Jose transit village — in a formerly industrial area of low-slung, nondescrip­t buildings — is expected to produce up to 7.3 million square feet of offices, 4,000 residentia­l units, 500,000 square feet of retail space that would include shops and restaurant­s, 300 hotel rooms and 15 acres of open space.

Google expects to employ up to 20,000 workers in the new neighborho­od.

In February 2023, Google said it was reassessin­g the developmen­t timeline for Downtown West, setting off speculatio­n the tech giant might back out of the project.

The company has not specified a new timeline for the downtown project.

In September 2023, however, Ruth Porat, president and chief investment officer of Google owner Alphabet, appeared at a block party in downtown San Jose with Mayor Matt Mahan and other top officials to provide assurances that the tech company is still fully committed to the project.

“Here in Downtown West, with input from San Jose residents, businesses and civic leaders, we have created a multidecad­e opportunit­y and developmen­t plan,” Porat said at the block party in September.

“We did that because we believe in the people who live here, who work here and are committed to being here in San Jose.”

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