The Mercury News

18-story glass office tower approved

The developer is ‘optimistic’ that it will find a building tenant

- By Maggie Angst mangst@bayareanew­sgroup.com

A showcase office tower featuring rooftop gardens soon could rise in the heart of downtown San Jose, dramatical­ly reshaping the skyline of the Bay Area’s largest city.

The San Jose City Council on Tuesday unanimousl­y approved the Sobrato Organizati­on’s proposal to build an 18-story office building with cascading glass facades on the corner of Market and West San Carlos, across the street from Cesar Chavez Park.

The building — dubbed Market Street Towers — will bring about 482,000 square feet of office space, 12,771 square feet of ground-level retail space and up to six floors of parking to the 1.49-acre site that is currently occupied by a surface parking lot.

“After many years of owning this site, we are excited to be here and look forward to bringing this unique and high-quality asset to the downtown core,” said Rob Tersini, vice president of real estate developmen­t for the Sobrato Organizati­on.

All the Sobrato Organizati­on needs now is to find a tenant because it doesn’t intend to construct the building on spec.

“We’re optimistic coming out of COVID(-19), but that’s still the case,” Tersini said in an interview Tuesday.

The building — designed by Miami-based architectu­re company Arquitecto­nica — is meant to look like separate office towers at first glance, though in reality its four curved walls merge

to create a single high-rise structure.

Once completed, two of the four building sections will feature rooftop gardens with multilevel terraces and seating areas.

Erik Schoennaue­r, a land use and property consultant who helped steer the proposal through San Jose’s planning process, said the project will help the city achieve its job goals and add pedestrian vitality to the SoFA District and the Plaza de César Chávez.

He touted the building’s “world-class architectu­ral design” as its main feature.

“Having the appearance of four different towers and yet twisting up into a single building — it deviates significan­tly from San Jose’s history of rectangula­r box structures in downtown high rises,” Schoennaue­r said in an interview.

The building would face South Market, West San Carlos and South First streets, sharing a property line with the Four Points by Sheraton Hotel — known as The Montgomery — and an apartment building to the north.

In an environmen­tal impact report, consultant­s noted the project would create “significan­t and unavoidabl­e shade and shadow impact” on Plaza de César Chávez, located just west it.

Still, Council member Raul Peralez thanked city staffers and the Sobrato Organizati­on for working together to create a project meant to more broadly enhance the downtown core.

“This has long been a surface lot that has certainly been in the city’s interest to want to have developed,” Peralez said during Tuesday night’s council meeting.

The office tower has the potential not only to transform San Jose’s skyline but also to force change with city regulation­s.

During the planning process for Sobrato’s Market Street Towers building, the developer was forced to modify its plans to not encroach on the public right of way — in midair.

Because of the structure’s unique twisting design, some elements of the building would protrude over the street several dozen feet above ground level, which the city’s building code does not permit.

To allow it, Mayor Sam Liccardo instructed the city attorney to revise the city’s ordinance so it aligns with the Internatio­nal Building Code, which permits encroachme­nts that are more than 15 feet above the ground.

“We are already so severely constraine­d by the height limits and our airport that really forces the somewhat squatty, boxy skyline that you see before you today, that the ability for architects to get more creative and build out is going to be really essential,” he said during the meeting.

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