Huge San Jose site once planned as tech campus lands Bay Area buyer
Big Picture
The San Jose tech economy and real estate market are showing signs of increasing disconnect. After years of rapid growth that drove record office leasing and property values, tech companies are pulling back on campus expansion and office space in Silicon Valley. Some planned large-scale mixed-use developments that once promised thousands of new homes — including projects tied to major tech players — have stalled or been shelved, partly due to shifting demand for office space and tougher economics for housing construction.
At the same time, housing development in San Jose is reacting to state pressures like Builder’s Remedy rules, where cities may approve housing by right in the face of shortages, and local planning bodies are wrestling with the rising cost of construction and resistance to density.
Why It Matters
San Jose sits at the intersection of two major trends: a weakening tech real estate footprint, and a critical shortage of housing that policymakers are under pressure to fix. When tech companies scale back on office and mixed-use developments, it depresses potential housing supply tied to those projects and leaves unanswered whether private-sector solutions will fill the gap.
That tension affects everything from downtown land use to affordability. If the economics of building new homes remain difficult, San Jose’s ability to meet state housing goals and absorb future job growth will weaken. Conversely, state policies intended to loosen zoning and accelerate housing can reshape how the region grows — but not without pushback and tradeoffs in neighborhood character and infrastructure demand.