Draft EIR Published for Icon-Echo Towers in Downtown San Jose

Icon Echo Towers, with Miro viewed to the right of image, development by Urban CatalystIcon Echo Towers, with Miro viewed to the right of image, development by Urban Catalyst

The Draft Environmental Impact Report has been published for Icon-Echo, a mixed-use development to reshape 2.1 acres by San Jose City Hall with housing and office space. The document provides local neighbors in Downtown San Jose with an opportunity to provide input about the project. Urban Catalyst is responsible for the proposal.

Demolition will be required for the existing site, which features a gas station, church, surface parking, and three small commercial buildings. The new project will be addressed as 147 East Santa Clara Street.

147 East Santa Clara Street, dubbed Icon Echo, rendering via Urban Catalyst

147 East Santa Clara Street, dubbed Icon Echo, rendering via Urban Catalyst

Following demolition, construction will start on the two WRNS Studios-designed towers, both 268 feet tall and connected by a below-grade garage. The street level will feature as many as ten commercial spaces spanning 8,500 square feet. Each structure will also feature a significant quantity of parking, a total of 992 spaces with 630 spaces for office employees, and 332 for residents, though 263 of that could be shared for office use.

The Northern Tower will contain 27 floors for as many as 415 units according to the Draft EIR, though the developer website states it will include 389 apartments. Residential amenities will feature a podium-topping pool deck with fire pits and outdoor dining furniture on the fifth floor. An indoor-outdoor fitness center will be included for all residents.

Icon Echo Towers residential pool deck, rendering courtesy Urban Catalyst

Icon Echo Towers residential pool deck, rendering courtesy Urban Catalyst

Icon Echo Towers roof terrace, rendering courtesy Urban Catalyst

Icon Echo Towers roof terrace, rendering courtesy Urban Catalyst

Icon Echo Towers roof deck, rendering courtesy Urban Catalyst

Icon Echo Towers roof deck, rendering courtesy Urban Catalyst

The first four levels will feature above-grade parking and some housing, while the top two floors will include the high-end penthouse units.

The Southern Tower will contain 21 floors with more generous ceiling heights. The building features 525,000 square feet of office area above eight levels of above-grade parking. The third, fifth, and seventh floors will be partially occupied by offices.

Icon-Echo office tower elevations, design by WRNS Studio

Icon-Echo office tower elevations, design by WRNS Studio

Icon-Echo residential tower elevations, design by WRNS Studio

Icon-Echo residential tower elevations, design by WRNS Studio

The design scheme will include a curtainwall-wrapped office building and a panel-clad apartment building. The office building will be carved with setbacks to articulate the exterior, minimize its visual scale, and create open-air decks. In contrast, the residential tower skin will be less dynamic, with windows connected to emphasize its verticality over North Fourth Street.

GLS Landscape Architects is the landscape architect.

Icon Echo Towers level nine open-deck terrace, rendering courtesy Urban Catalyst

Icon Echo Towers level nine open-deck terrace, rendering courtesy Urban Catalyst

Icon Echo Towers exterior lobby, rendering courtesy Urban Catalyst

Icon Echo Towers exterior lobby, rendering courtesy Urban Catalyst

The application still requires approval for Special Use Permit, Vesting Tentative Map, Historic Preservation Permit, demolition, new building permits, Department of Public Works clearances, and public street improvement permits. Four permits, filed between December 2019 and mid-2021, are currently under review with the San Jose Planning Commission.

The document is available on the San Jose City Planning Department here. Public comment will be accepted from its time of publication, June 17th, up to Monday, August 1st.

Icon Echo Towers elevations, rendering courtesy Urban Catalyst

Icon Echo Towers elevations, rendering courtesy Urban Catalyst

The project is part of the Urban Catalyst Opportunity Zone Fund II. As of June 20th, Urban Catalyst has raised over $100 million for the second fund, representing an important portion of the project’s estimated $600 million costs. So far, Urban Catalyst has acquired three of the four necessary parcels, with the last parcel expected scheduled to sell at the end of the year.

The first fund closed after reaching $131 million. According to Urban Catalyst, the second fund will remain open for investors until December 31st, 2023. The first fund allowed UC to fund The Mark student housing project, Paseo Camera 12 where construction has started, Delmas Senior Housing, TMBR, Keystone Marriott Hotel, and the Fountain Alley Buildings.

The project aims to be the second significant project to rise across from San Jose City Hall, following the recent completion of Miro Apartments by Bayview Development Group.

The project is located within the Downtown Primary Commercial zoning district and the Downtown Employment Priority Area overlay. Construction is expected to start as early as next year, with the crews taking three years from groundbreaking to completion to finish the tower.

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1 Comment on "Draft EIR Published for Icon-Echo Towers in Downtown San Jose"

  1. Potentially controversial take; San Jose (generally) gets far more interesting towers than both San Francisco and Oakland. I have no idea how they attract better architects and architecture overall, but massing, materials, finishes, etc — all seem to be of higher aesthetic quality and better suited for a denser urban fabric.

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