City of San Jose Approves 439 South 4th Street

439 South 4th Street, rendering by SCDC439 South 4th Street, rendering by SCDC

The City of San Jose has approved plans for a 25-story residential tower at 439 South 4th Street in Downtown San Jose, Santa Clara County. The project will bring over two hundred apartments near the San Jose State University campus, primarily for students. Nelly Amas is the property owner.

Plans for 439 South 4th Street will produce a 261-foot structure with roughly 280,000 square feet of housing and 50,000 square feet for a 168-car garage. Additional space will be provided for 70 bicycles. Unit sizes will vary with 63 two-bedrooms, 21 three-bedrooms, 84 four-bedrooms, and 42 five-bedrooms. On-site amenities include a dog run, rooftop deck, fitness center, community rooms, and study rooms.

439 South 4th Street streetscape view, rendering by SCDC

439 South 4th Street streetscape view, rendering by SCDC

439 South 4th Street rooftop amenity deck, rendering by SCDC

439 South 4th Street rooftop amenity deck, rendering by SCDC

SCDC is responsible for the design as project architect. Illustrations show a bare urban infill broken up with a rectangular corner feature and vertical columns of curtain-wall glass. HMH is the project’s civil engineer and landscape architect.

The half-acre parcel is located along South 4th Street between East San Salvador Street and East William Street. Demolition will be required for 31 existing units. Future residents will be half a block from the SJSU campus. Construction is expected to rise next to The Mark, a 23-story residential tower with 230 units proposed by Urban Catalyst at 475 South 4th Street.

439 South 4th Street, aerial view via Google Street View

439 South 4th Street, aerial view via Google Street View

The developer has yet to reply to a comment request from YIMBY about the construction timeline.

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5 Comments on "City of San Jose Approves 439 South 4th Street"

  1. This is why we have no affordable housing, the bay area has a half million units no one can afford and half of them are sitting empty, 5 bedroom probably 10k a month for who? There should be moratorium that only affordable housing can be built. If the cities and state audited all these high end apartments they would see the high vacancy rate, the could buy them through eminent domain and create affordable housing. Greed caused massive building of office space that is defaulting on their loans, that could be turned into affordable housing. We do not need any more unaffordable luxury apartments. But they are building them taking up space needed for affordable housing.

    • “5 bedroom probably 10k a month for who? ”

      er…5 single people who live as roommates. Plus, it won’t be $10K/month, more like $7K. So $1400/month/roommate.

      Anyone who says ‘don’t build anything unless you can build affordable units’ is one or more of the following :

      i) Illiterate about basic economics. All new supply lowers prices.
      ii) A covert NIMBY trying to be a concern troll.

      Yes, office conversion to housing is good, but office space usually convert to higher-end housing, due to the low number of bathrooms per square footage.

  2. Why not build higher? The location on this high rise is away from the SJC flight path. Can we ever better our skyline? From a far distance SJ downtown looks like one HUGE square box!

  3. Matt in Uptown | March 27, 2024 at 8:57 pm | Reply

    A lot of quiet displacement is going on in San Jose. Look at Google Street View since 2007 to see what’s happening. Out with the working class, who have no political power whatsoever, and in with the high-income earners, and eventually the money laundering condo buyers. The higher-income earners have shunned Downtown San Jose for a very long time, preferring stucco McMansions on postage stamp lots, where they cover every square inch of earth with something impervious. If conspiring developers and enabling bureaucrats have their way… that won’t be for very much longer. YIMBY!

  4. More housing is better, but what we need is some first floor store fronts. We got rid of parking minimums for a reason…

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