Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Bloomingdales Confirmed for Valley Fair

In 2008 there was an epic expansion plan for Valley Fair mall that included 500,000 SQFT of additional retail, including two new anchors: Bloomingdales and Neiman Marcus. Unfortunately, the great recession postponed those plans indefinitely. Now it looks like the Valley Fair expansion is about to restart. Last week when Macy's announced that it was closing its Valco store, it also announced that a 150,000 SQFT Bloomingdales is coming to Valley Fair and would employ 250 people. They even provided an expected opening date of fall 2017.

I can't find the original map that showed where the new stores would be, but can tell you that the original plan called for a third concourse in the highlighted area below. If they go by the previous plan, the expansion will also include 50 new stores, outdoor Santana Row-like dining areas, and 3,000 new parking spaces.

Source: The Merc


Tuesday, January 13, 2015

23 Things People From San Jose Have to Explain to Out-of-Towners

Movoto Insider has put together a fun list of San Jose cultural references that locals needs to explain to visitors. Below I put a few of my favorites, but you should really head over to their site and check out the full list.

Let us know how accurate you think the list is as well as any additional San Jose references that should have been included!



1. This Is Sharks Territory

23 Things People From San Jose Have To Explain To Out-Of-Towners
Source: San Jose Sharks Facebook
And if you don’t think so, you might as well just leave San Jose.

11. Yes, The Weather Is Actually That Perfect
23 Things People From San Jose Have To Explain To Out-Of-Towners
Source: Flickr user jganderson
When your average summer high is 80 degrees, and a January day is 60, it’s hard to complain about the weather.

12. But Somehow They Manage To Find Something To Complain About

23 Things People From San Jose Have To Explain To Out-Of-Towners
Source: Tumblr user imabitloony
It doesn’t matter how perfect the weather is, a 60-degree day will still have everyone pulling out their winter coats.

14. The Single Barrel Is The Best Way To Get Drinks In Style
23 Things People From San Jose Have To Explain To Out-Of-Towners
Source: singlebarrel Facebook/Chris Loves Photo
Ever wanted to drink at a speakeasy-style saloon where all the bartenders have on their best 1920s garb? So does everyone from San Jose.

15. The Winchester Mystery House Is Actually As Awesome As Everyone Says

23 Things People From San Jose Have To Explain To Out-Of-Towners
Source: Flickr user nerdcoregirl
If you’ve ever wondered what the most haphazard construction in the world looked like, you’ll find the answer in this historic house. The still unfinished mansion is full of strange hallways, hidden rooms, and supposedly various ghosts.

23. Don’t You Dare Call It A Suburb

23 Things People From San Jose Have To Explain To Out-Of-Towners
Source: giphy.com
Unless you really really want to annoy a San Jose local. Come on! It’s the third largest city in California!


Check out the rest of the list here: Movoto Insider

Monday, January 12, 2015

Two New Midtown Projects in the Works!

Robertee from the San Jose Development Forum discovered a couple new Midtown San Jose infill projects that are in the planning stages. Both are by the same developer which explains the similarities in design and are quite dense for the area. Check out the drawings below:

740 W San Carlos - 6-story residential building with 63 units and 3,130 SQFT of retail on the ground floor. Looks like there is a small park and hot tub on the podium as well as a terrace on the top floor.



777 W San Carlos (270 Sunol St.) - 5-story building with 148 residential units and 2,000 SQFT of retail on the ground floor. There is a swimming pool off to the side and terraces on the top floor and plenty of units with balconies.



Sunday, January 11, 2015

UByAN Baby & Kid's Thrift Store Closing

After 17 years in business, a thrift shop for kids on Bascom is closing down since their building is about to be torn down. Below is the note that we received from UByAN. Best of luck to to them and hopefully they will find a new home elsewhere in San Jose.


UByAN - New & Used Baby and Kids' Stuff is closing it's doors this week after 17 years of providing the San Jose community
with gently used & recycled baby and kids' clothing, furniture and equipment.

UByAN wants to thank the San Jose and surrounding communities for their patronage all these years.

A very sincere and heartfelt thank you.
Lilian Flores
UByAN - New & Used Baby and Kids' Stuff
www.ubyan.com


Saturday, January 10, 2015

San Jose Stats: Silicon Valley Cities Topped NYC for Spending

When you think of heavy consumer spending, New York is likely one of the first cities that comes to min. However, it looks like Silicon Valley is quickly pulling ahead with this metric... whether that is a good or bad thing I'm not so sure.

In New York, the average spend per shopping transaction is a hefty $239.85. However, it is $345.09 in Palo Alto, $314.50 in Mountain View, $278.30 in Sunnyvale, and $266.46 in Fremont. That make four Silicon Valley cities that now surpass New York in consumer spending per transaction. Not far behind New York is SF at $235.90 and San Jose at $216.86. So of the top 10 cities with the highest consumer spending, five were in Silicon Valley.

Source: SVBJ




Friday, January 9, 2015

Downtown with a Capital D

Some people noticed that when I refer to Downtown San Jose, I write the word downtown with a capital "D" instead of a lowercase letter. I started doing this years ago and it is entirely intentional.

When you write it as "downtown" you are referring to a type of place... such as a street, a block, or an alley. It's a generic descriptor to can refer to a downtown anywhere. It's nothing more than a common noun.

However, when you write "Downtown" it becomes a proper noun and means a place in and of itself. It's a destination or district, such as Willow Glen, Japantown or Santana Row and it gives our urban core some respect. Instead of "a" downtown it becomes "the" Downtown, our Downtown.

It may seem like a small difference, but I feel like it changes the context of the word entirely. Its just something to keep an eye out for when reading what other people write about Downtown San Jose. How the word is written will already give you a lot of information on what their opinions are. I hope to see more people using the capital D in the future!

Thursday, January 8, 2015

January 2015 Downtown Dimension Highlights

Here are my notes from the latest edition of Downtown Dimension:
  • Raul Peralez became the new City Council representative for District 3 (Downtown San Jose), replacing Sam Liccardo who is now our Mayor. He has served as a San Jose police officer for 8 years and has 10 years of experience as a teacher. His top priorities are improving public safety, economic vitality, rebuilding relations between the city and unions, public transit, ending homelessness, and affordable housing. If he could change one thing about Downtown it would be to see taller buildings and having a "skyscraper" downtown [Josh: I'm starting to like this guy].
  • The San Pedro Square Market and SJSU earn Golden Nail awards which are given to projects that add character and delight to Downtown.
  • The City is offering a construction tax waiver to the first developer to build a non-hotel commercial high-rise more than 150 feet tall (this incentive can be valued between $800,000 to $1.5 million). Office vacancy Downtown plummeted from 23% to 13% in 2014.
  • The City Council has banned bikes on sidewalks in order to make Downtown safer for pedestrians.
  • Broadway San Jose is enjoying a record-breaking season. The final week of "WICKED" in San Jose brought in $1.7 million, which was the highest grossing Broadway show in the country that week. More records are expected to be broken this summer with "Book of Mormon."
  • Dice.com is going to move its headquarters from Santa Clara to 16,000 SQFT at 225 W. Santa Clara Street, accommodating up to 100 employees.
  • Groundwerx is going to trim 874 sycamore trees lining First and Second streets over the next month.
To read the full newsletter, click here!


Wednesday, January 7, 2015

BART or Automated Transit Network?

The Merc had an article last week entitled "Affordable transitt will help close gap between rich, poor in South Bay." I think that title may be a bit misleading since it is actually a proposal to completely change the plan for BART to Silicon Valley - Phase 2. Instead of spending $4 billion to tunnel underneath Downtown San Jose, the article points out that running BART west from Milpitas to the San Jose Airport and then Diridon above ground would only cost $1.6 billion. However, that is not the interesting part. The real fascinating proposal is not building the BART extension at all and instead building using $1.6 billion to build a 100 station Automated Transit Network (PRT system) that would blanket a huge portion of San Jose and be placed above roadways.

While I am a huge advocate for BART Downtown, I strongly believe that automated systems will be the ideal transportation of the future and would be willing to sacrifice BART for it if given a choice. Check out the article over here and let us know what your thoughts are.

Many thanks to Francisco Gonzalez for sending this in!