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Multifamily Development Segment Rides a Perfect Storm

March 17, 2014 By Solar_Row

crescentAs the commercial building boom accelerates within the South Bay’s Golden Triangle district, the burgeoning North San Jose tech district bounded by highways 101, 880 and 237, future workers will be able to take advantage of new residential options rising in the surrounding regions and linked by bus, light rail and, in the near future, BART.

Tech giants such as Samsung and others are expanding their operations within the Golden Triangle while other major players, such as Adobe, Acer, Oracle and Pinger, continue to lure technology workers within the downtown San Jose core. These workers, according to Jerry Nickelsburg, senior economist with the UCLA Anderson Forecast, are predominately Millennials (18-33) who prefer to live close to work in more densely populated areas rife with restaurants and shops.

Read the full story at The Registery, here.

Filed Under: Blog

Tech Jobs Incredibly Positive for 2014

February 3, 2014 By Solar_Row

SFmapThe San Francisco-Silicon Valley region experienced a sizzling 2013 in real-estate development and job growth that were fueled by a young technology crowd. More of the same is forecast for 2014 although the pace will not be quite as dizzying.

Read the source article at The Registry, here.

Bay Area real estate The RegistrySan Francisco and Silicon Valley will also increasingly become symbiotic as tech companies from the Peninsula to the South Bay continue to beef up their office presence in the big city in an effort to attract highly skilled employees who are seeking the urban lifestyle.

Tempering the enthusiasm somewhat are factors that include rising interest rates and a shaky confidence from small companies concerned with the high cost of doing business in California.

Still, “the trend from an office standpoint in this very special geography that we sit in is incredibly positive,” said Carl Shannon, senior managing director for New York-based developer Tishman Speyer. “We’re blessed in San Francisco to have an economy which has overcome the shrinking that is going on in corporate America.”

 

 

Filed Under: Blog

60 South Market Building Sold in San Jose

January 15, 2014 By Solar_Row

60Harvest Properties, a full service commercial real estate investment and development firm based in Emeryville, today announced it has purchased 60 South Market Street in San Jose, California.

Harvest Properties acquired the property from Ares Management with partner LaSalle Investment Management for an undisclosed sum. The transaction is the debut acquisition for Harvest and LaSalle as partners as well as the first investment for both in downtown San Jose.
Investment brokers involved in the transaction include Jeffrey Weber, Greg Coith, and Edmund Najera of Eastdil Secured. 60 South Market is a 232,536 square foot, 14-story Class “A” office tower centrally located in Silicon Valley’s downtown San Jose. Prominently positioned on the east side of Market Street, the property represents one of the finest downtown office towers with recently renovated common areas and on-site amenities that include a fitness center, conference room and outdoor balconies. With easy access to Highway 87 and Interstate 280, the p roperty provides direct access to key commute corridors and is within walking distance to Caltrain, the VTA light rail, and a myriad of amenities including San Pedro Market.

Read the full story at The Registry here.

Filed Under: Blog

Buildings Get Smarter and So Do Workplaces

January 8, 2014 By Solar_Row

wallsIn an era of rapid technological progress, is there a reason that an office complex or classroom building—both housing lots of smart people—can’t elevate its own IQ?

In a smart building, software allows communications among traditionally separate systems running everything from lighting, heating and ventilation to security and telecommunications. The systems’ convergence creates a single intelligent network that allows a building to react dynamically to real-time conditions using input from every source attainable. Moreover, smart buildings are the backbone of smart work environments, something that tenants increasingly want.

“They are engineering smart buildings with automation, which facilitates the creation of smart work environments.” Bob Brown, chief executive and co-founder, Fremont-based Teladata LLC
Energy is typically the largest expense for any U.S. building owner or user, accounting for 30 percent of operating costs in an average commercial building, according to the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency. Overall, commercial and industrial buildings use $200 billion a year nationwide on power, producing nearly half of the nation’s greenhouse-gas emissions. Smart buildings are being credited with reducing energy use from 20 percent to 30 percent as compared to conventionally built and operated structures.

Read the rest of the story at The Registry – here.

 

Filed Under: Blog

Walkability of South Bay Cities

January 2, 2014 By Solar_Row

When Rockwood Capital and Four Corners Properties bought the Water Tower Plaza office and retail building in downtown Campbell, the “walkability” of the neighborhood was cited in the decision to buy. According to Seattle-based Web site and research company Walk Score, downtown Campbell is a “walker’s paradise.” Its 94-point score on a 100-point scale makes it one of the most walkable neighborhoods in Silicon Valley.

We in the Bay Area hear a lot about the virtue of urban living, including benefits for the air, natural environment and public health. The region’s preoccupation has been evident for years. First communities created “greenlines” beyond which development was no longer allowed (San Jose’s was established in 1996), then turned to high-density, infill development—preferably close to transit—to house more people and to get them out of their cars.
If walkability is taken as a proxy for urban, Walk Score provides another metric by which to measure our progress toward a “better” (or at least more compact) place to live. San Francisco ranks as the second most-walkable city in the country with an overall walk score of 84.9. (No. 1 New York’s score is 85.3.) Berkeley has a community-wide score of 82; Emeryville an 80. They are the only cities in the Bay Area with overall walkability scores above 70.

Read the rest of the story at The Registery – here.

 

Filed Under: Blog

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