As part of its commitment over the next decade to develop master-planned communities on land it owns around California’s Silicon Valley, Google recently unveiled its proposal to build between 1,675 and 1,850 new housing units within a 40-acre redevelopment to create a new transit-oriented village in the East Whisman area of Mountain View, Google’s headquarters city. The redevelopment would include at least 12 acres of parks and open space, 30,000 sf of retail, 20,000 sf of civic and event space, and about 1.3 million sf of office space.
East Whisman was rezoned last year to allow for housing and higher buildings on real estate that currently is occupied mostly by single-story office buildings and surface parking, according to the Mountain View Voice, which first reported on this redevelopment project. In November, the city adopted a blueprint for future growth that allowed for more office space on the condition that there is a commensurate increase in housing. Google’s proposal meets the city’s requirement that there be at least three housing units for every 1,000 sf of new office space, according to Michael Tymoff, Google’s real estate director.
Google intends to allocate 20% of the residential space, spread over six buildings within the proposed village, to affordable housing.
LENDLEASE WILL OVERSEE THE MIXED-USE DESIGN AND CONSTRUCTION
Lendlease is Google’s development partner on this project, which is known as the Middlefield Park Master Plan (so named for its proximity to the Middlefield Valley Transportation Authority light rail station). Last July, Lendlease entered into an agreement with Google to jointly undertake the master planning, entitlement, and development of three major areas of San Francisco Bay Area, where Lendlease would develop up to 15 million sf of residential, retail, hospitality and associated community uses in new neighborhoods. (Google would develop the office spaces.) Lendlease’s mixed-use components are valued at an estimated $15 billion. Pending approvals, development could commence early next year.
Six residential buildings (in yellow) would be located on Maude and Ellis Streets in the East Whisman area of Mountain View. The blue squares indicate where office buildings would be located.
For the Middlefield Park project, Lendlease would take the lead on design and construction of the mixed-use components. (Neither partner disclosed other AEC firms that might be involved.)
“This joint agreement between Google and Lendlease will help address the need for new housing in the San Francisco Bay Area,” said Denis Hickey, Lendlease’s CEO Americas. “We’re eager to contribute our world-class approach to creating unique urban communities, and we are focused on delivering outstanding places that redefine how people choose to live, work, connect and contribute to creating an active community.”
GOOGLE IS INVESTING TO BUILD 20K HOMES
Middlefield Park is one of several redevelopment projects with housing prominently featured that Google is engaging. These include a mixed-use village with up to 5,900 homes in its San Jose Downtown West plan that spans 80 acres and more than 7 million sf. Mountain View's North Bayshore tech park, currently home to most of Google's office growth, could soon have 5,700 new homes, according to the Mountain View Voice.
The 40-acre redevelopment project would include open space that, while owned by Google, would be mostly open to the public. It would include multiple parks, a recreation center and, possibly, a soccer field and aquatic center.
Last June, Google’s CEO Sundar Pichia announced that the company would invest $1 billion in housing across the Bay Area over the next decade. At least $750 million of Google’s Bay Area land—most of it currently zoned commercial or office—would be repurposed for residential housing. And 15,000 of the 20,000 proposed housing units would support all income levels. The company also established a $250 million investment to provide developers with incentives to build at least 5,000 affordable homes across the market. Google will also give $50 million in grants to nonprofits focused on alleviating homelessness and displacement.
Related Stories
Mixed-Use | Nov 26, 2019
Chicago’s first citizenM hotel to be part of Sterling Bay’s mixed-use Michigan Ave. development
bKL will serve as the project’s lead architect.
Multifamily Housing | Oct 25, 2019
Chicago’s long-gestating luxury condo tower nears construction
Helmut Jahn designed the project.
Mixed-Use | Oct 22, 2019
The LINK PHX mixed-use development opens in Downtown Phoenix
Shepley Bulfinch designed the project.
Mixed-Use | Oct 18, 2019
BIG designs new vertical neighborhood for South America’s greenest capital
The project is Bjarke Ingels Group’s second in Ecuador.
Mixed-Use | Oct 16, 2019
River Rock mixed-use community breaks ground in Chattanooga
The Beach Company is developing the project.
Mixed-Use | Oct 15, 2019
Skybridges connect SOM’s two trapezoidal Buenos Aires towers
The project aims to become the center of activity in the city’s Catalinas Norte business district expansion.
Mixed-Use | Oct 9, 2019
OMA’s KaDeWe combines retail, a hotel, and a rooftop park in one building
The project will establish urban connections and public spaces through its own internal organization.
Mixed-Use | Oct 1, 2019
KPF breaks ground on West Lake 66 mixed-use development in Hangzhou
The project hopes to reinvigorate the city’s deteriorated surrounding blocks.
Mixed-Use | Sep 16, 2019
Heatherwick Studio designs a giant planted pergola in Tokyo’s Toranomon-Azabudai district
Japan’s tallest skyscraper, designed by Pelli Clarke Pelli, is also part of the district’s redevelopment.
Multifamily Housing | Aug 19, 2019
Affordable, senior development rises in the Bronx
RKTB Architects is designing the project.