Support our work!

Ensure the future of local Bay Area News by becoming a Local News Matters member today.

$
$
$

Thanks for your contribution!

Sign up for our free newsletters!

Receive in-depth news stories and arts & entertainment coverage from around the Bay Area in your inbox.

  • DONATE TO SUPPORT LOCAL NEWS!
  • Sign In
  • Local News
    • Featured News
    • Bay Area News
    • Marin News Matters
    • Santa Clara County News Matters
    • Mendocino News Matters
    • Stockton News Matters
    • Equity Ripples
    • Amplifying Voices
    • Inspire Me
  • CA News
    • California Currents
    • California Local
    • KQED
  • Election Results
  • Crime, Justice, & Prison News
    • Inside/Out
    • Crime & Public Safety
    • Prison News
  • The Big Issues
    • Living Longer & Aging in the Bay Area
    • Housing & Homelessness
    • Public Health
    • Environment
  • Arts & Culture
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Bay City Books
    • Travel
    • Bay City Sketchbook
  • Education & Youth Voices
    • Education Matters
    • Youth Voices
    • Contra Costa Youth Journalism
  • Technology, AI & Innovation
    • Experiments with AI
    • Science, Nature & Technology
    • Data Points
  • Special Projects
    • Audio Files
    • Bay City Beat
    • Listen In Marin
    • Remember When
    • Talkers
    • Trailblazers
  • About Us
    • About Our Staff
    • About Our Board
    • Bay City News Internships
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Newsletters
    • Bay City News … in the News
    • Sponsorships and Advertising
    • Write for Local News Matters
  • BCN Wire Clients
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • RSS

  • Local News
    • Featured News
    • Bay Area News
    • Marin News Matters
    • Santa Clara County News Matters
    • Mendocino News Matters
    • Stockton News Matters
    • Equity Ripples
    • Amplifying Voices
    • Inspire Me
  • CA News
    • California Currents
    • California Local
    • KQED
  • Election Results
  • Crime, Justice, & Prison News
    • Inside/Out
    • Crime & Public Safety
    • Prison News
  • The Big Issues
    • Living Longer & Aging in the Bay Area
    • Housing & Homelessness
    • Public Health
    • Environment
  • Arts & Culture
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Bay City Books
    • Travel
    • Bay City Sketchbook
  • Education & Youth Voices
    • Education Matters
    • Youth Voices
    • Contra Costa Youth Journalism
  • Technology, AI & Innovation
    • Experiments with AI
    • Science, Nature & Technology
    • Data Points
  • Special Projects
    • Audio Files
    • Bay City Beat
    • Listen In Marin
    • Remember When
    • Talkers
    • Trailblazers
  • About Us
    • About Our Staff
    • About Our Board
    • Bay City News Internships
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Newsletters
    • Bay City News … in the News
    • Sponsorships and Advertising
    • Write for Local News Matters
  • BCN Wire Clients
Skip to content
Local News Matters

Local News Matters

Connecting audiences with quality, local news

  • DONATE TO SUPPORT LOCAL NEWS!
  • Sign In
Sign In
  • Local News
    • Featured News
    • Bay Area News
    • Marin News Matters
    • Santa Clara County News Matters
    • Mendocino News Matters
    • Stockton News Matters
    • Equity Ripples
    • Amplifying Voices
    • Inspire Me
  • CA News
    • California Currents
    • California Local
    • KQED
  • Election Results
  • Crime, Justice, & Prison News
    • Inside/Out
    • Crime & Public Safety
    • Prison News
  • The Big Issues
    • Living Longer & Aging in the Bay Area
    • Housing & Homelessness
    • Public Health
    • Environment
  • Arts & Culture
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Bay City Books
    • Travel
    • Bay City Sketchbook
  • Education & Youth Voices
    • Education Matters
    • Youth Voices
    • Contra Costa Youth Journalism
  • Technology, AI & Innovation
    • Experiments with AI
    • Science, Nature & Technology
    • Data Points
  • Special Projects
    • Audio Files
    • Bay City Beat
    • Listen In Marin
    • Remember When
    • Talkers
    • Trailblazers
  • About Us
    • About Our Staff
    • About Our Board
    • Bay City News Internships
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Newsletters
    • Bay City News … in the News
    • Sponsorships and Advertising
    • Write for Local News Matters
  • BCN Wire Clients
Posted inLocal News

North San Jose multifamily project begins on former site of historic Japanese farmhouse

by Vicente Vera, San Jose Spotlight May 20, 2025

Share this:

  • Share on X (Opens in new window) X
  • Share on Facebook (Opens in new window) Facebook
  • Share on LinkedIn (Opens in new window) LinkedIn
  • Share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window) WhatsApp
  • Email a link to a friend (Opens in new window) Email
Mayor Matt Mahan and Councilmember David Cohen (left) celebrate a significant multifamily housing project coming to North San Jose. Once completed, it will add more than 1,000 homes to the area. (Vicente Vera/San Jose Spotlight)

CONSTRUCTION IS UNDERWAY on the first installation of a multifamily housing and retail project in North San Jose on former Japanese-owned farmland.

Mayor Matt Mahan and North San Jose Councilmember David Cohen broke ground on the 0 Seely Ave. site Friday, as the area once surrounded by trees and farm structures was flattened to make way for 1,472-new homes. The Hanover Company, the project’s developer, plans to bring the first nearly 400 homes online in 2027.

Don't miss out on Bay Area news, delivered to your inbox twice a week.

The housing development described as “much-needed” by Mahan was controversial among preservation advocates who objected to the removal of a farmhouse once owned by World War II Japanese internment camp survivor Eiichi “Ed” Sakauye. The farmhouse has since been placed on a moving truck as it awaits funding for its future location at History Park.

A home taken off its foundation and placed on a moving block surrounded by fencing.
The Eiichi “Ed” Sakauye farmhouse sits on a moving block as construction begins on the multifamily housing project at 0 Seely Ave. in San Jose. (Vicente Vera/San Jose Spotlight)

Scott Youdall, who represents the developer, said plans for the upcoming Coyote Creek Village neighborhood include an homage to the Sakauyes.

Contribute to Local News Matters

$
$
$

Support our independent, nonprofit newsroom, Local News Matters, by becoming a member today. Members enable us to pay reporters, photographers and editors to serve our communities with local news that matters in the greater Bay Area.

“We’ll have all ranges of incomes, community and retail all centered around a new city park named after Eiichi Edward Sakauye — a prominent San Jose figure whose family farmed on this land for generations,” Youdall said Friday. “Make no mistake, the only reason we’re here today … is because this mayor and this council had the vision.”

Bumper crop of housing

San Jose has broken ground on more than 700 multifamily homes since the start of the year, a total reversal from last year when it built none.

Mahan credits the passage of his Multifamily Housing Incentives Program for bringing so many developers to San Jose with the promise of a 50% tax cut on housing development through the rest of the year. He said the program helped jumpstart the North San Jose project.

“We’re optimistic that by the end of this year, over 2,000 new homes will be under construction in San Jose thanks to this incentive,” Mahan said Friday. “Just this last week, Council voted unanimously to expand, adding a Federal Realty project, which will bring an additional 258 homes to San Jose. We’re reviewing more projects in the pipeline that might benefit from this incentive.”

“Make no mistake, the only reason we’re here today … is because this mayor and this council had the vision.” Scott Youdall, Hanover Company spokesperson

Federal Realty, a San Jose housing developer, was retroactively added to the list of developers with projects eligible for the Multifamily Housing Incentive Program during last Tuesday’s City Council meeting.

Publicly-traded Federal Realty Investment Trust is the developer and principal owner of Santana Row in the West Valley.

Councilmembers will decide at a June 17 meeting whether to grant Federal Reality $7.9 million in tax cuts and a $3.4 million refund the developer previously paid in in-lieu fees for not meeting the affordable housing minimum requirements.

Construction costs ‘don’t pencil’

Mahan told San José Spotlight the city needs to assist builders in getting the thousands of homes already approved started.

He said cities across Texas and Colorado charge just a few thousand dollars in one-time fees to developers per home built, while California charges around $29,000, not including affordable housing fees.

“We have something like 6,000 or 7,000 (homes) entitled that we’ve said ‘yes’ to that aren’t getting built because the cost of construction is too high and it just doesn’t match — they don’t pencil,” Mahan told San José Spotlight. “So we have to look again at what else we can do to help these projects pencil so they can secure financing.”

Cohen said he wants Coyote Creek Village to be among the neighborhoods to turn North San Jose into an active hub like downtown. The nearby River Oaks community is excited about the project, he said.

“It is going to bring not only a lot of housing units, but another 2-acre park, which will be very important for this community that doesn’t have enough park space,” Cohen said Friday. “It also will have the first dog park in North San Jose, which is really important for the community.”

Contact Vicente Vera at vicente@sanjosespotlight.com or follow @VicenteJVera on X.

This story originally appeared in San Jose Spotlight.

Tagged: David Cohen, developers, development, farms, historical sites, History, History Park, housing, Japanese Americans, japanese internment, land use, Mayor Matt Mahan, North San Jose, parks, San Jose, San Jose Spotlight, wwii

Local News Matters brings community coverage to the SF Bay Area so that the people, places and topics that deserve more attention get it. Our nonprofit newsroom is supported by the generosity of readers like you via tax-deductible donations to Bay City News Foundation.

FIND MORE STORIES

  • Local News
    • Featured News
    • Bay Area News
    • Marin News Matters
    • Santa Clara County News Matters
    • Mendocino News Matters
    • Stockton News Matters
    • Equity Ripples
    • Amplifying Voices
    • Inspire Me
  • CA News
    • California Currents
    • California Local
    • KQED
  • Election Results
  • Crime, Justice, & Prison News
    • Inside/Out
    • Crime & Public Safety
    • Prison News
  • The Big Issues
    • Living Longer & Aging in the Bay Area
    • Housing & Homelessness
    • Public Health
    • Environment
  • Arts & Culture
    • Arts & Entertainment
    • Bay City Books
    • Travel
    • Bay City Sketchbook
  • Education & Youth Voices
    • Education Matters
    • Youth Voices
    • Contra Costa Youth Journalism
  • Technology, AI & Innovation
    • Experiments with AI
    • Science, Nature & Technology
    • Data Points
  • Special Projects
    • Audio Files
    • Bay City Beat
    • Listen In Marin
    • Remember When
    • Talkers
    • Trailblazers
  • About Us
    • About Our Staff
    • About Our Board
    • Bay City News Internships
    • Frequently Asked Questions
    • Newsletters
    • Bay City News … in the News
    • Sponsorships and Advertising
    • Write for Local News Matters
  • BCN Wire Clients

Follow us

Twitter: @baynewsmatters
Instagram: @baynewsmatters
Facebook: @baynewsmatters

Local News Matters
  • Facebook
  • Twitter
  • Instagram
  • RSS

Bay City News Foundation
(510) 251-8100
newsroom@baycitynews.com

Staff Page

Terms of Use

FIND MORE STORIES

  • Local & Community News
  • California News
  • Politics & Civic Engagement
  • Crime, Justice, & Prison News
  • The Big Issues
  • Arts & Culture
  • Education & Youth Voices
  • Technology, AI & Innovation
  • Special Projects
  • About Bay City News
© 2026 Connecting audiences with quality, local news Powered by Newspack

Sign in

Or

Sign in by entering the code we sent to , or clicking the magic link in the email.

Forgot password
Continue Set a password (optional)

Terms & Conditions. This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Gift this article

 

Loading Comments...
 

    Complete your transaction