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Gilroy
October 17, 2024

Tag: downtown gilroy

Downtown Troubles

Ten years ago, Gilroy adopted a Downtown Specific Plan to transform the city’s core. The plan envisioned entry monuments, welcoming gateways, outdoor dining, nicely designed signage and beautified streetscapes in and around the historic district. It called for 1,576 new residential units and the “development of roughly one million square feet of new commercial building space.”The plan’s adoption capped a two-and-a half-year effort by a volunteer task force, city staff, elected officials and a consulting firm paid $180,000 to organize the process and draft the plan.Jose Montes, who owns four buildings downtown, started buying properties around the time of the plan’s inception and remembers it being an exciting time. A decade later, he says, “to be quite honest, they haven’t done just about anything.”City planners seem to have forgotten about the plan altogether, even though it’s a legal extension of the General Plan. The city has not formally reviewed its progress and has no schedule to implement the remainder of its provisions, said planning manager Susan Martin. She characterized the plan as a “working document” and cited accomplishments such as the development of the Heritage Bank and Allium buildings, the installationof streetscape improvements and banners and allowances for outdoor dining. It’s clear, though, that downtown still has a long way to go. The city lagged in implementing the “short range” accomplishments slated for the first two years. Then, two years into the plan, the economy crashed and the Great Recession brought everything to a halt. The city council changed and planning staff turned over. Economic incentives were withdrawn, retail vacancies grew and enforcement actions began. Property owners and investors lost their enthusiasm. At the midpoint of the 20-year plan, which runs through 2025, roughly a quarter of tenant spaces are vacant, and new development is at a standstill.The plan had mapped out development incentives, such as tax and fee waivers and loans. “I hope the plan will come back,” said Montes. “It’s important for the city, important for the downtown, and vital for investors.”Downtown property owner Gary Walton, who chaired the task force convened in 2003, called the 194-page document “a lot of paper.” “Like everything else they do, all too often reports sit on the shelf and gather dust,” he said.Things got off to a strong start in 2003, when city officials eliminated “development-impact fees" for housing construction. Then-city planning manager Bill Faus told the Dispatch in 2005 the incentive program “has already served its purpose quite well. We currently have 22 active projects downtown, and nine being discussed. What it has done is stimulate activity.” “Once we got rid of impact fees, the downtown took off,” recalls real estate developer James Suner, who was vice chair of the Downtown Specific Task Force and whose James Group built Carriage Park and Dos Acres. Without the economic incentives, he said, “it’s mathematically impossible to rebuild downtown.”Montes agreed: “Since the fee waiver left, no building has been able to be built.”The city’s insistence on maintaining the fees ignores the disproportionately higher burden they impose on smaller lots, Suner said. Economies of scale give larger developments an advantage over smaller ones, he said.There hasn’t been any new construction in the downtown core, and no new construction is planned, said developer Walton, who has owned 11 downtown buildings, including the interim library and arts center, the Lizarran Tapas Restaurant at the Old City Hall Building and the La Aldea apartment complex.Gilroy’s aggressive approach to earthquake safety contributed to a self-perpetuating cycle of economic malaise, he added. The city’s Unreinforced Masonry Ordinance, written in 2011, does not allow landlords to sign new tenants until expensive retrofits are completed.Landlords who are unwilling or unable to reinforce their buildings leave them vacant. High vacancy rates breed a perception of non-viability among potential investors, who stay away. Landlords, lacking investment or financing, cannot charge high rents, so they don’t make enough money to retrofit the buildings, he added.“It’s been a disaster,” Walton said.Mayor Don Gage acknowledges a lack of progress since the ordinance was passed, but places the blame squarely on property owners.“These people that own these buildings, they basically did nothing,” Gage said. “There were a few that did some things, and they’re actually still doing them. But others didn’t do it. And they use every excuse in the book. ‘I can’t afford it, the building isn’t worth it, the fees are too high, blah blah blah blah blah.’”The city’s enforcement of the URM ordinance was the only responsible way to prepare the city for an earthquake, which could leave the city liable for injuries in the event of a lawsuit, Gage said. The fines levied and legal action taken has instilled a sense of urgency among proprietors, who otherwise feel unmotivated to act, he said.“They didn’t want to spend the money until we started fining them and putting them in jail,” he said.“Property owners whwwo call for continued fee waivers are only trying to shirk their responsibility,” Gage said. The city cannot afford to subsidize businesses, which would gain access to public resources at the expense of the city.“They want everything for free,” he added.Walton thinks it’s time to “redo the plan.” He says, “they need to revisit it. The world has changed since the Great Recession.”“Why would you be satisfied with having the worst downtown in Santa Clara County and not be working 24/7 to reverse that?” asks Walton. “I don’t get it.”Dan Pulcrano contributed to this story.

Iconic Gilroy store is reborn

GILROY—It has been called iconic, a landmark and the heart of town—and more recently a curb-hugging eyesore across from stately Old City Hall on Gilroy’s most important, historic downtown corner.

Beer crawl, after party Saturday

Although Halloween is still almost two weeks away, it’s never too early to start celebrating. In Gilroy, the holiday celebration begins at 2 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 24 with the annual Halloween Beer Crawl and Beer Crawl After Party.

Turning up the heat on URM property owners

City officials plan on turning up the heat on owners of buildings deemed unfit to survive a high magnitude earthquake, especially those who have not complied with Gilroy's unreinforced masonry ordinance. At the Aug. 18 City Council meeting, Mayor Don Gage advocated for increasing fines on delinquent property owners.

Council scales back sign ban

City Council overturned a controversial part of Gilroy's sign ordinance Aug. 18 and decided that A-frame signs are permitted downtown. Though the required size of the A-frame signs has yet to be determined, they must be constructed of a wrought iron frame. Handheld signs, including those twirled by advertisers promoting new housing developments, are prohibited within city limits.

Paseo to get historical flare

Paseo Design Group is working to secure funding for an interpretive eight-panel art installation, landscaping and other additions, according to the group’s chairman and former Mayor Al Pinheiro.

Syngenta, Kawahara, City to refresh downtown plants

On June 13, volunteers are gathering to plant baskets and wine barrels along Monterey Street in the downtown corridor as part of ongoing beautification efforts.

Garlic Capital’s Art and Wine Stroll sets record pace

Gilroy's Annual Art and Wine Stroll packed the streets of downtown for the fifth year in a row with more than 500 people in attendance. Under sunny blue skies, a record 25 wineries and 24 retailers participated, up from a count of 20 from last year. The weather was just cool enough to enjoy the red wines along with the chilled white wines.

2 letters: Civic center/library parking lot – really?; Sequestration scare government...

Really, a parking lot that isn’t needed? What about library hours, downtown?

Downtown property owner files for bankruptcy

After months of negotiating with the bank to no avail, a local real estate investment company filed for bankruptcy on July 10, to avoid foreclosure on two downtown Gilroy properties.

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