The Mercury News

Big tech, logistics center being eyed at prime site in San Jose

Existing structure will be demolished to make way for new office building

- By George Avalos gavalos@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

An old research and office site in north San Jose could be transforme­d into a modern industrial center for advanced manufactur­ing or tech-oriented logistics under a plan being floated at City Hall.

A developmen­t group intends to bulldoze an existing four-decade-old structure at the corner of Lundy Avenue and Concourse Drive and replace the property with a brandnew industrial building, plans on file with city officials show.

The new building would sprout on a 4.1-acre site at 2105 Lundy Ave. and 2031 Concourse Drive, according to the developmen­t proposal.

9th St. Partners, a real estate company that state business records show is based in the Los Angeles-area city of Manhattan Beach, has proposed the project.

The proposed building would total 102,000 square feet if it is developed, the project plans show.

The project would represent a big increase in the size of the building on the property. A 24,900-square-foot building constructe­d in 1983 now occupies the site.

“The outdated property is currently approximat­ely 50% vacant,” according to the proposal.

The potential developmen­t would be of the type that could attract major tech-powered logistics and commerce companies such as Amazon.

“The proposed project is designed to reposition the property as a modern industrial facility that will appeal to technologi­cally oriented logistics and/ or manufactur­ing companies,” the developmen­t plans state. “The current improvemen­ts are functional­ly obsolete for these types of companies.”

The new project could provide an economic boost for this section of San Jose.

“Companies will be able to attract skilled workers with a high image (and) comfortabl­e work environmen­t” if the project is built, 9th St. Partners said in the developmen­t proposal.

The developmen­t company intends to develop the project on a speculativ­e basis, that is, without any tenants signed up in advance.

“The building can help employers attract the talent required to operate technologi­cally advanced facilities and serve technology-oriented logistics and manufactur­ing uses,” according to the project plans.

The developmen­t company has obtained a contract to purchase the site where the project would be constructe­d.

9th St. Partners is seeking projects at under-utilized sites that can become job hubs, according to the company.

“The firm was founded in 2019 with a single mission: to create value for the communitie­s in which we work and our investors by developing stateof-the-art industrial facilities that generate new jobs for the community,” 9th St Partners states in a post on its website.

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