Mixed Use

300 South 1st Street Hero view, rendering courtesy Westbank

Renderings for The Orchard from Westbank’s Master Vision for Downtown San Jose

Earlier this month, Westbank released their master vision for five skyline-defining developments across downtown San Jose. Today, we highlight The Orchard, producing two towers at 300 South 1st Street and the third tower at 409 South 2nd Street, called The Orchard Workspace and The Orchard Residential. The Orchard yields over two million square feet combined, producing a campus of offices, housing, retail, and restaurants.

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98 Franklin Street with One Oak to its left, rendering by Skidmore Owings & Merrill

New Building Permits Filed for 98 Franklin Street, Civic Center, San Francisco

New building permits have been filed for a 37-story mixed-use tower at 98 Franklin Street in the Civic Center neighborhood of San Francisco. The city’s Planning Department approved the development in May of 2020, allowing for construction on top of surface parking at the corner of Oak and Franklin with a small parcel of land, allowing construction to extend to Market Street. Related Companies is responsible for the development.

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Gateway Crossings

Renderings Revealed For Mixed-Use Project, Gateway Crossings, At 1205 Coleman Avenue, Santa Clara

Permits were filed seeking the approval of a new five-story mixed-use building on 1205 Coleman Avenue in Santa Clara. The project proposal includes constructing a multi-family apartment complex that will also offer retail space and amenities. A two-story above-grade parking garage is also included.

Hunter Storm and Holland Partner Group have teamed up to develop the massive project. MVE+Partners Inc is managing the construction. TOD Brokaw LLC is the proper owner.

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One California, image by Andrew Campbell Nelson

Number 46: One California Street, Financial District, San Francisco

Coming in as the 46th tallest tower in the Bay Area planned or built is One California Street in the Financial District of San Francisco. While it is not high on the list, the building holds an extraordinarily prominent position looking over two entrances to the busy Embarcadero BART station along Market Street and nearby the San Francisco Ferry Building. The building topped out in 1969 at 438 feet, making it the fifth tallest skyscraper in the city until 1971.

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