Bringing in the Harvest at Jack London Square
If developers are right, Oakland is poised to join San Francisco and Berkeley in a culinary triangle of excellence. A 185,000-square-foot marketplace, to be called California Harvest Hall, will be the centerpiece of a $300-million redevelopment project in Jack London Square on Oakland's Embarcadero. Read More.
Oak-to-Ninth
District
Oak-to-Ninth
This District covers the area between Oak Street and the Ninth Avenue
Terminal. The Port released a Request for Qualifications for this
development opportunity in March 2001, and selected the development
team with Oakland Harbor Partners , LLC. An Exclusive Negotiating
Agreement was executed in December of 2001, and the Port and the
development team have been undertaking extensive due diligence on
the site. It is anticipated that the feasibility analysis for preliminary
discussions will be completed in May 2001, and assuming that the
issues surrounding the development of this 60-acre site have been
addressed, the developer will prepare a master plan for the site.
Community involvement is a key element of a successful mixed-use
development project on the site. Read development
details, RFQ, and developer information.
View the Estuary Plan.
Fruitvale / San Antonio District
Gray &
Reynolds
Developers Dan Gray and Peter Reynolds, who successfully completed
Fruitvale Station, a mixed-use retail project in Oakland, are proposing
a 24,000 square foot office building on the former Hungry Hunter
site adjacent to the newly-constructed Homewood Suites hotel. The
three-story building will include two boat brokerages and a deli
on the ground floor, with office suites above. A special feature
is the ability to offer berths to the office tenants. View Advertisement