The Mercury News

Google releases developmen­t details

Downtown West plan includes $200 million fund for community

- By Maggie Angst and George Avalos Staff writers

In a bid to get San Jose’s final blessings on its broad downtown vision, Google has offered to pony up $200 million in community benefits as part of its plans to build a transitori­ented village where as many as 20,000 people could work.

The proposal includes money for anti-displaceme­nt efforts and affordable housing, two urgent concerns that have galvanized the community. Some previous critics of the project said the new proposal is a significan­t step forward.

“While working in collaborat­ion with the city and our community to transform our western downtown into a vibrant urban village, Google has also crafted a new national model

for transformi­ng the relationsh­ip between tech and the surroundin­g community,” San Jose Mayor Sam Liccardo said in an interview.

Google has proposed the developmen­t of a transit-oriented neighborho­od near the Diridon train station and SAP Center that would include office buildings, homes, shops, restaurant­s, activity hubs, cultural centers, hotel facilities and open spaces.

The details released today mark the first time the Mountain View-based search giant has outlined specific efforts it will undertake for the community, after months of closed door negotiatio­ns with the city, including:

• Several hundred affordable homes that Google would pay to build on company-owned land within the San Jose project. Additional affordable homes would be funded through special fees paid by the search giant or by Google providing the land for housing developmen­t at sites near the transit village.

• A $150 million community fund that would include programs to preserve affordable housing and fight homelessne­ss. Also included are homeless services, education initiative­s, workforce developmen­t and programs for small-business resilience and entreprene­urship.

• A 30% local hire goal for on-site constructi­on, and a commitment to paying state prevailing wages to all onsite constructi­on workers.

• On-site field trips, career days and computer science workshops for students from underserve­d communitie­s who have an interest in technology and technology-based careers.

These would be offered once Downtown West is opened.

The remaining $50 million in the fund would be spread throughout these other efforts, including local hiring, career exploratio­n and awarding design and constructi­on contracts for the office buildings to local, small and diverse businesses.

The funding package is “a major component for the city and for the community” to address concerns about the project’s causing displaceme­nt and exacerbati­ng the housing crisis, San Jose Councilmem­ber Raul Peralez said.

The city will turn to community leaders for help in distributi­ng the funding.

“By putting $150 million and real decision-making power in the hands of grassroots leaders in neighborho­ods at risk of displaceme­nt, this project sets a new model for how tech developmen­t can keep families housed and lift the quality of blue-collar jobs,” said Maria Noel Fernandez, campaign director with Silicon Valley Rising, an umbrella organizati­on of community groups.

“City staff and Google did a really great job at trying to balance our immediate needs with our future needs,” Councilmem­ber Dev Davis said.

The community benefits package is in addition to $250,000 in public benefits such as park fees that the city mandates, Liccardo said.

Separate from the community benefits package, Google estimates the value to the city of other features in the project will be at least $1 billion. Among these benefits are a more walkable, connected city with multiple modes of transporta­tion and transit, cutting-edge infrastruc­ture upgrades, 15 acres of new parks and open spaces, on-site solar generation in Downtown West, no increases in greenhouse emissions, and widescale use of recycled water.

Google also will preserve several historical­ly significan­t buildings and structures, including the historic San Jose Water Co. building, the century-old Kearney Pattern Works and Foundry building and the “dancing pig” sign that is part of the former Stephen’s Meat Products site.

The tech titan says that it hopes to break ground on the first new buildings in 2023 and that it is aiming to launch constructi­on of streets and other crucial infrastruc­ture in 2022 if the city approves a project that will reshape a wide section of downtown. The City Council is expected to make a final decision on the developmen­t agreement by the end of June.

“Right now, what you have in that area is the Shark Tank, the train station, a collection of old industrial buildings, some businesses and homes,” said Scott Knies, executive director with the San Jose Downtown Associatio­n.

“Downtown West is going to be a new community,” Knies said. “It will not be a walled-off spaceship. It will be part of the streets, it will provide open space, housing, transit, nature areas. This is the way a city is supposed to work.”

Yet even beyond the game-changing developmen­t aspects, city officials suggested that the community benefits are of the type that hasn’t been seen in connection with a project in San Jose.

“Google’s commitment to build thousands of units of housing and to ensure a quarter of them will be rentrestri­cted to enable real affordabil­ity is as concrete of a commitment as we have ever seen from a major employer wishing to expand its footprint in a city,” Liccardo said.

 ?? GOOGLE ?? An artist’s rendering shows a streetscap­e for Google’s proposed Downtown West transit-oriented neighborho­od in San Jose.
GOOGLE An artist’s rendering shows a streetscap­e for Google’s proposed Downtown West transit-oriented neighborho­od in San Jose.

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