A developer wants to convert the former location of a San Jose Planned Parenthood into housing

The former site of a Planned Parenthood clinic could spawn into a mixed-use housing complex in San Jose’s Evergreen neighborhood — a project that is already raising some concerns from residents.

B3 Commercial LLC is proposing razing a 13,275-square-foot medical facility at 2470 Alvin Ave. and replacing it with an eight-story, 85-feet tall, 138-unit development with nearly 5,000 square feet of retail space on the .93-acre parcel.

“This project is the beginning of fulfilling the city’s vision of creating an urban village that has mixed-use development (and) vibrant and activated streets for the surrounding community,” said Michaelle Williams, a representative from San Jose-based architectural firm Studio Current. “We believe that this project will be a great catalyst for getting developments to this area.”

The existing single-story building has housed medical offices for more than a decade, including Planned Parenthood before it relocated its clinic several months ago to an office near the intersection of Tully Road and King Road, less than a third of a mile from the former site.

The current proposal calls for 24 studios, 83 one-bedroom units, 26 two-bedroom units and five three-bedroom apartments.

Williams said the project aims to enter the building permit and construction phase between 2026 and 2027.

Although the project does not currently conform to planning and zoning guidelines, the city is allowing it to move through the review process because the developer has invoked the builder’s remedy.

This provision in state law limits local governments without a certified housing element from denying projects that run afoul of planning and zoning regulations so long as the developments contain at least 20% affordable housing. Developers must have submitted a preliminary application while the city was out of compliance to lock in planning standards at that time and complete a full application within 180 days.

The project, however, faced some pushback from neighbors members at a Monday community meeting.

Although the proposal champions offering 20% affordable housing, the current neighborhood community commercial zoning normally requires residential developments to be 100% affordable housing, leaving questions about who would benefit in the neighborhood.

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