Cottle Transit Village: Dense Mixed Use in San Jose [View all]
Cottle Transit Village: Dense Mixed Use in San Jose
By Kathleen McCormick
September 25, 2015
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The Blossom Hill Caltrain Station, with a pedestrian bridge funded by HGST, links downtown San Jose and the Bay Area with the data storage technology companys workplace campus and the developing Cottle Transit Village. (Ken Kay Associates)[/font]
The development of Cottle Transit VillageSan Jose, Californias first and Silicon Valleys largest mixed-use transit-oriented infill siteis well underway after a long Great Recessionled hiatus. Located 15 miles (24 km) south of the city center on a development island formed by Cottle Road, Monterey Highway, State Route 85, and the triangulation of three rail transit stations, Cottle Transit Village comprises two new retail/commercial centers, green infrastructure with parks, a bike trail, sports fields, and more than 3,000 homes sprouting up in new neighborhoods next to the HGST campus.
The consolidation of this bucolic former IBM campusnow owned by HGST, a data storage technology companyis being viewed as a value-added model for rightsizing an industrial site and reentitling its excess land to create a dense urban village in a largely suburban city that has become a development focus for the fast-changing San Francisco Bay area. Early successes include more efficient land use, greener buildings, retention of manufacturing jobs, and a needed mix of housing, services, and recreationall linked to transit.
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As San Joses first and Silicon Valleys largest mixed-use transit-oriented development, Cottle Transit Village includes nearly 3,000 homes, many at TOD densities near the transit stations. (Ken Kay Associates)[/font]
Cottle Transit Village is definitely our first foray into transit-oriented mixed use in a very substantive way, says Nanci Klein, San Joses deputy director of economic development and director of real estate. San Jose is a city that has been suburban and sprawling, and we want to move to being a comfortable urban environment. Were aspiring to be a place that has great walkable places, parks and trails, and connections to transit.
Since the recession, the regions growth has centered on San Jose, along with San Francisco and Oakland. With more than 1 million residents, San Jose is now the largest city in the nine-county Bay Area, the third-largest city in California, and tenth largest in the United States. Its downtown is considered the unofficial capital of thriving Silicon Valley. Spanning 180 square miles (466 sq km), this affluent citywhose average household income exceeds $100,000is expected to have 400,000 new residents by 2040. Freeway congestion, along with demand for new housing, has migrated from northern Silicon Valley and San Francisco, prompting San Jose to shape its own growth around dense urban villages. ...................(more)
http://urbanland.uli.org/planning-design/cottle-transit-village-dense-mixed-use-san-jose/