Google gets the green light to build multi-billion dollar megacampus in San Jose

Google gets the green light to build multi-billion dollar megacampus in San Jose
# 26 May 2021 11:38 (UTC +04:00)

San Jose city officials on Tuesday night officially approved a plan for Google to build a massive campus in the heart of California’s third-largest city, APA reports citing CNBC.

For its “Downtown West” project, Google will develop 80 acres of land in downtown San Jose, including 7.3 million square feet of office space for 20,000 workers and thousands of housing units. It’s Google’s first mixed-use campus and will be one of its largest when completed. The San Jose city council unanimously approved the company’s plans Tuesday evening and several council members held back tears while doing so.

The approval comes as Google aims to model a shift away from closed-off tech campuses to stem the growing alienation toward tech companies, whose success has contributed to a shortage of affordable housing and big cultural shifts in Silicon Valley and other tech hubs. Google, which is doubling down on bringing workers back to offices amid the weakening pandemic, is also planning another massive, town-like hub just 10 miles up the road in Mountain View.

“There’s tremendous mistrust of the government and suspicion of Big Tech and it could have been easy for many of our community members simply to succumb to slogans and simplistic thinking but thousands rolled up their sleeves,” San Jose mayor Sam Liccardo said at Tuesday’s meeting. “Rather than jump in one camp or another, community members pushed and prodded, and urged the city and Google to stretch and reach higher.”

Liccardo continued, thanking community groups, Google, and parent company Alphabet’s finance chief Ruth Porat and SVP Kent Walker, who he said “we’re committed to seeing this through.”

“We’d like to thank the City and community for years of engagement and true partnership,” said Google’s San Jose Development Director Alexa Arena in a statement Tuesday night. “Together, we have created a foundation for an equitable and environmentally focused place that represents the best of San Jose and Google.”

The Downtown West campus will include 4,000 housing units, 1,000 of which will be designated for a range of “affordable” housing. In the city of San Jose, “extremely low-income” qualifiers — the bottom range of low-income housing — earn 30% of the average medium income. Exact housing prices haven’t been determined yet, officials said.

Downtown West will also include up to 300 hotel rooms and 800 residences for short-term lodging for Google’s corporate guests. While Google will own all 80 acres, more than half of the project will be allocated for residential and public space and include features like parks, restaurants, retail space, entertainment space and ecological viewing stations.

Construction on the project could begin as early as next year but is expected to take between 10 and 30 years to fully build

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THE OPERATION IS BEING PERFORMED