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Housing development site in downtown San Jose staggers into default

SAN JOSE — The site of a proposed downtown San Jose housing highrise that could have produced hundreds of residential units has staggered into default due to a delinquent loan, according to documents filed on Wednesday with the Santa Clara County Recorder’s Office.

Previously, city officials approved the development of a tower at 70 South Almaden Ave. that would have contained 708 residential units. However, the project’s developer, an affiliate of China-based Z&L Properties, never broke ground.

Downtown San Jose's former Greyhound Bus station at 70 S. Almaden Ave. Aresidential towers complex in downtown San Jose has encountered some financial difficulties that led to the project's default on its mortgage, although a fresh loan may ward off the loan woes. Google MapsThe site of the former Greyhound bus terminal at 70 South Almaden Avenue in downtown San Jose. (Google Maps)

In 2019, Full Standard Properties, the Z&L affiliate, received $19.5 million in financing from Shanghai Commercial Bank. Shanghai Commercial filed the loan default for the site. This marks the second time Shanghai Commercial has filed a loan delinquency notice against the property.

“Foreclosure by the lender would be the best outcome for any chance of this site being developed,” said Bob Staedler, principal executive with land-use consultant Silicon Valley Synergy. “Z&L was widely touted as a boon for San Jose and it’s been a disaster.”

Full Standard Properties, the Z&L-linked entity, bought the former Greyhound bus terminal property in 2016 for $39 million from a group headed by Bay Area real estate executive Mark Tersini.

Instead of an eye-catching housing tower, the old Greyhound site has become an undeveloped lot with an uncertain future.

The loan default is the latest in a string of financial setbacks to plague Z&L Properties. The real estate firm burst on the scene several years ago with wide-ranging plans to develop numerous towers in downtown San Jose, but only one has been built.

Among the struggling Z&L projects:

— 188 West St. James St.: A lender filed a notice of default for a delinquent $264 million construction loan. The double-tower residential complex, which totals more than 600 units, is the only San Jose project that Z&L ever constructed.

— 43 East St. James St.: Z&L agreed to protect and renovate an old church at this site next to St. James Park, but instead has neglected the historic building and allowed it to fall into disrepair. Z&L has also failed to develop housing towers on the site, which has become blighted.

— West St James Street and Terraine Street: Z&L had proposed a large housing development but never broke ground. Z&L eventually sold the property near San Pedro Square to a real estate alliance of global developer Westbank and Bay Area developers Gary Dillabough, Tony Arreola and Mark Lazzarini.

— In 2017, a Z&L affiliate paid $25 million for the vast 3,654-acre Richmond Ranch in southeast San Jose. In January 2024, the Z&L affiliate sold it for $16 million through an intricate plan to eventually enable the Santa Clara Valley Habitat Agency and the Santa Clara County Parks and Recreation Department to buy the property. Z&L never disclosed its game plan for owning it.

“We need these sites out of Z&L’s hands so we can start the clean-up process while a sensible development plan is figured out,” Staedler said.

Originally Published: February 27, 2025 at 5:30 AM PST

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