April 24, 2024

Stack Infrastructure to deliver large data center in San Jose – Robert Khodadadian

By Robert Khodadadian May2,2023 #amir Korangy #Appraisal value #Asset management # commercial buildings #bob knakal #brokerage #Building amenities #Building codes #Building inspections #Building maintenance #Building permits #Cap rate #Cash flow #Closing costs #Commercial mortgage-backed securities #Commercial property development #Commercial property inspections #Commercial property management #Commercial tenant screening #Common area maintenance fees #Debt financing #Due diligence #Economic incentives #Energy efficiency #Environmental assessments #Equity financing #Escrow services #Exit strategies #Financing #Historic tax credits #industrial properties #Investment #Investment Properties #Investment property #Investment sales #khodadadian #Landlord representation #Lease agreements #Lease assignments #Lease buyouts #Lease negotiations #Lease options #Lease renewals #Leasehold improvements #live plus income buildings #Luxury property #Market analysis #Net operating income #office buildings #Office Space #Opportunity zones #Property appraisal #Property Development #Property insurance #Property Leasing #Property listing services #Property management #Property ownership structure #Property redevelopment #Property surveys #Property tax #Property tax assessments #Real Estate Consulting #Real Estate Contracts #Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) #Real Estate Law #Real estate market analysis #Real estate market trends #Real Estate Negotiation #Real Estate Portfolio Management #Rent roll #Retail Space #Sales #Short-term rentals #Site feasibility studies #Site plans #Site selection #skyline properties nyc #Subleasing #Tax incentives #Tenant credit analysis #Tenant improvements #Tenant leasing #Tenant representation #Tenant retention #Title searches #townhouses #Traded NYC #Zoning regulations
Stack Infrastructure to deliver large data center in San Jose – Robert Khodadadian, Robert Khodadadian
Stack Infrastructure to deliver large data center in San Jose - Robert Khodadadian <!-- wp:html --><p>Stack Infrastructure’s Brian Cox with 2400 Ringwood Avenue and 1849 Fortune Drive (LinkedIn, Google Maps, Getty)</p> <p><span>Denver-based developer Stack Infrastructure has proposed to build 500,000 square feet of data center space in San Jose, according to public records, adding to the large Silicon Valley pipeline for such developments.</span></p> <p><span>Data centers house technological infrastructure for building, running and delivering online applications and services.</span></p> <p><span>The project calls for two buildings located at </span><span>2400 Ringwood Avenue and 1849 Fortune Drive. </span><span>The two data centers will total 522,194 square feet, along with a 36,573-square-foot manufacturing building and a 150,000-square-foot parking structure. Both centers would have a maximum height of 80 feet and feature loading docks, storage, office space and commercial space.</span></p> <p><span>Two commercial buildings totaling 135,000 square feet would be demolished to make room for the project. </span></p> <p><span>The facility will be powered by a 100 megavolt electrical substation on the eastern section of the property. The buildings will also be powered by 36 three-megawatt and three one-megawatt diesel-fired backup generators. In the industry, space is measured in megawatts as an indication of how much power is required to operate the facility.</span></p> <p><a href="https://therealdeal.com/sanfrancisco/2023/03/10/construction-pipeline-swells-for-silicon-valley-data-centers/"><span>Silicon Valley</span></a><span> has seen the demand for data center space swell in the past year, which has led to a number of projects added to the pipeline. According to a CBRE report, Silicon Valley ranks third in North America in terms of net absorption of data centers with 62.4 megawatts, just slightly trailing 64.4 MW in Hillsboro, Oregon. Northern Virginia leads the pack by a wide margin with 436.9 MW of net absorption in 2022.</span></p> <p><span>While Silicon Valley was third in net absorption, it had the largest data center construction pipeline at the end of 2022. More than 141 MW was under construction, 66 percent of which was pre-leased. </span><span>There were 66 MW of new deliveries in 2022, up significantly from 21.5 MW in 2021. The market’s inventory now totals 379.6 MW. </span></p> <p><span>“Limited land and power supply has led some providers to move from Santa Clara to neighboring parts of Silicon Valley, where there are redevelopment opportunities,” Jerry Inguagiato from CBRE said. “Despite the uncertainty of the macroeconomic environment and rising construction costs, providers are eager to find ways to meet demand as it continues to outpace supply.” </span></p> <h4 class="ReadMoreSection_title">Read more</h4> <div> <div class="CategoryCityLabel_categoryCityLabelWrapper"> <div class="CategoryCityLabel_cityLabel CategoryCityLabel_cityLabel-sanfrancisco"> San Francisco </div> </div> <p> <a class="ArticleTile_articleTile" href="https://therealdeal.com/sanfrancisco/2023/03/10/construction-pipeline-swells-for-silicon-valley-data-centers/"><br /> <span class="ArticleTile_articleTileTitle ReadMoreArticle_tileTitle">Construction pipeline swells for Silicon Valley data centers</span><br /> </a></p> <div class="CategoryCityLabel_categoryCityLabelWrapper"> <div class="CategoryCityLabel_cityLabel CategoryCityLabel_cityLabel-sanfrancisco"> San Francisco </div> </div> <p> <a class="ArticleTile_articleTile" href="https://therealdeal.com/sanfrancisco/2022/11/18/microsoft-plans-massive-data-center-campus-in-san-jose/"><br /> <span class="ArticleTile_articleTileTitle ReadMoreArticle_tileTitle">Microsoft plans massive data center campus in San Jose</span><br /> </a></p> <div class="CategoryCityLabel_categoryCityLabelWrapper"> <div class="CategoryCityLabel_cityLabel CategoryCityLabel_cityLabel-sanfrancisco"> San Francisco </div> </div> <p> <a class="ArticleTile_articleTile" href="https://therealdeal.com/sanfrancisco/2022/11/23/vantage-data-centers-gets-350m-loan-for-santa-clara-site/"><br /> <span class="ArticleTile_articleTileTitle ReadMoreArticle_tileTitle">Vantage Data Centers gets $350M loan for Santa Clara site</span><br /> </a> </p></div> <p>The post <a href="https://therealdeal.com/sanfrancisco/2023/05/01/stack-infrastructure-to-deliver-large-data-center-in-san-jose/">Stack Infrastructure to deliver large data center in San Jose</a> appeared first on <a href="https://therealdeal.com/">The Real Deal</a>.</p> <p> Denver-based developer Stack Infrastructure has proposed to build 500,000 square feet of data center space in San Jose, according to public records, adding to the large Silicon Valley pipeline for such developments. Data centers house technological infrastructure for building, running and delivering online applications and services. The project calls for two buildings located at 2400<br /> The post Stack Infrastructure to deliver large data center in San Jose appeared first on The Real Deal.  Uncategorized, Development The Real Deal </p> <p> Lead by real estate veteran Robert Khodadadian, Skyline Properties has been instrumental in many multi-million dollar commercial developments, including a $12 million contract for the White House Hotel, a 99-year ground lease of a four-story commercial site in Harlem, and a retail co-op on Prince St. for $50 million.</p> <p>Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. There are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller.</p><!-- /wp:html --> Denver-based developer Stack Infrastructure has proposed to build 500,000 square feet of data center space in San Jose, according to public records, adding to the large Silicon Valley pipeline for such developments. Data centers house technological infrastructure for building, running and delivering online applications and services. The project calls for two buildings located at 2400 The post Stack Infrastructure to deliver large data center in San Jose appeared first on The Real Deal. robert khodadadian Skyline Properties New York City Real Estate Commercial Real Estate Investment Properties Property Development Real Estate Brokerage Office Space Retail Space Residential Real Estate Real Estate Investing Property Management Real Estate Services Real Estate Transactions Real Estate Market Analysis Commercial Property Sales Real Estate Acquisitions Real Estate Consulting Property Valuation Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) Property Listings Real Estate Portfolio Management Real Estate Finance Property Leasing Real Estate Negotiation Real Estate Contracts Real Estate Law Real Estate Industry News ground leases office buildings commercial buildings apartment buildings townhouses mixed use investment building mixed use user buildings live plus income buildings industrial properties off market real estate daniel shirazi new york real estate real estate investment

Stack Infrastructure’s Brian Cox with 2400 Ringwood Avenue and 1849 Fortune Drive (LinkedIn, Google Maps, Getty)

Denver-based developer Stack Infrastructure has proposed to build 500,000 square feet of data center space in San Jose, according to public records, adding to the large Silicon Valley pipeline for such developments.

Data centers house technological infrastructure for building, running and delivering online applications and services.

The project calls for two buildings located at 2400 Ringwood Avenue and 1849 Fortune Drive. The two data centers will total 522,194 square feet, along with a 36,573-square-foot manufacturing building and a 150,000-square-foot parking structure. Both centers would have a maximum height of 80 feet and feature loading docks, storage, office space and commercial space.

Two commercial buildings totaling 135,000 square feet would be demolished to make room for the project

The facility will be powered by a 100 megavolt electrical substation on the eastern section of the property. The buildings will also be powered by 36 three-megawatt and three one-megawatt diesel-fired backup generators. In the industry, space is measured in megawatts as an indication of how much power is required to operate the facility.

Silicon Valley has seen the demand for data center space swell in the past year, which has led to a number of projects added to the pipeline. According to a CBRE report, Silicon Valley ranks third in North America in terms of net absorption of data centers with 62.4 megawatts, just slightly trailing 64.4 MW in Hillsboro, Oregon. Northern Virginia leads the pack by a wide margin with 436.9 MW of net absorption in 2022.

While Silicon Valley was third in net absorption, it had the largest data center construction pipeline at the end of 2022. More than 141 MW was under construction, 66 percent of which was pre-leased. There were 66 MW of new deliveries in 2022, up significantly from 21.5 MW in 2021. The market’s inventory now totals 379.6 MW. 

“Limited land and power supply has led some providers to move from Santa Clara to neighboring parts of Silicon Valley, where there are redevelopment opportunities,” Jerry Inguagiato from CBRE said. “Despite the uncertainty of the macroeconomic environment and rising construction costs, providers are eager to find ways to meet demand as it continues to outpace supply.” 

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The post Stack Infrastructure to deliver large data center in San Jose appeared first on The Real Deal.

 Denver-based developer Stack Infrastructure has proposed to build 500,000 square feet of data center space in San Jose, according to public records, adding to the large Silicon Valley pipeline for such developments. Data centers house technological infrastructure for building, running and delivering online applications and services. The project calls for two buildings located at 2400
The post Stack Infrastructure to deliver large data center in San Jose appeared first on The Real Deal.  Uncategorized, Development The Real Deal 

Lead by real estate veteran Robert Khodadadian, Skyline Properties has been instrumental in many multi-million dollar commercial developments, including a $12 million contract for the White House Hotel, a 99-year ground lease of a four-story commercial site in Harlem, and a retail co-op on Prince St. for $50 million.

Robert Khodadadian has long had a simple philosophy about selling real estate. There are approximately a million buildings in the city, and the broker that gets to sell any one among the multitude that will hit the auctioning block at a given moment is, sometimes, simply the person who happens to pitch their services to the right seller.

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