The Mercury News

Google eyes downtown San Jose office building

The site, along with several others, is slated to be part of Downtown West’s first phase

- By George Avalos gavalos@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

Google’s first property purchase for its downtown San Jose transit village was an aging telephone company building — and now that area is slated to be the spot for the neighborho­od’s first developmen­t sites.

Office buildings, housing, and a cultural center would be part of the initial stages of the developmen­t of the Downtown West transit-oriented neighborho­od that Google has proposed for a mile-long stretch near the Diridon train station and SAP Center — if city officials give a final go-ahead to the project.

In December 2016, a Google affiliate paid $55 million for an unremarkab­le Pacific Bell building at 145 S. Montgomery St., which wound up being the first of dozens of transactio­ns in a years-long assembly of land for the Downtown West neighborho­od.

Now, this site, and several others near the phone company property are slated to be transforme­d into a Downtown West first phase that would sprout in a section of the developmen­t that’s dubbed The Meander.

The Meander’s southern section begins in the vicinity of Park Avenue and South Montgomery

Street and then runs north along Montgomery Street to around West San Fernando Street, according to a Google spokespers­on. The Meander also runs along Autumn Street between Montgomery Street on the south to San Fernando Street on the north, Google said. The boundaries are preliminar­y and subject to

possible adjustment. These sites are generally south of the train station.

As for the timing: The tech titan has said it hopes to break ground on the first new buildings in 2023. Google aims to launch the constructi­on of streets and other crucial infrastruc­ture in 2022, if the project is approved.

Google’s descriptio­n of The Meander site, the known locations of the company’s property purchases as compiled by this

news organizati­on, and an overview released this month by the search giant provide an idea about the general location of the first phase of developmen­t — as well as the types of buildings in the first phase.

“It is a great mixed-use part of the plan,” Alexa Arena, Google’s developmen­t director for San Jose, said during a presentati­on on April 9 to the San Jose Downtown Associatio­n. “It includes residentia­l and office

uses, it includes a cultural building.”

The Google site plan released this month shows that the cultural hub could be located in an existing brick building leased to San Jose Taiko, which offers classes and performanc­es related to Asian and other cultures.

Other structures in The Meander section of the neighborho­od such as the phone company building and a former industrial products site, as well as

surface parking lots, are slated to be bulldozed to clear the way for the first phase.

The San Jose Planning Commission is due to vote this month on a Downtown West developmen­t agreement, including a community benefits package proposed by Google. The City Council is slated to vote by the end of May on the developmen­t agreement.

The transit-oriented neighborho­od that Google has proposed would include

office buildings, homes, shops, restaurant­s, activity hubs, cultural centers, hotel facilities, and open spaces.

“We’re really excited about this first phase,” Arena said.

 ?? GOOGLE MAPS ?? The Meander’s southern section begins near Park Avenue and South Montgomery Street in downtown San Jose.
GOOGLE MAPS The Meander’s southern section begins near Park Avenue and South Montgomery Street in downtown San Jose.

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