Second Harvest food bank preps San Jose HQ plan after lawsuit win

SAN JOSE — A busy nonprofit food bank will again pursue the construction of a modern headquarters and warehouse in San Jose after prevailing in a lawsuit that had sought to derail the project.

Second Harvest of Silicon Valley is actively planning its future headquarters again after a Santa Clara County court dismissed the lawsuit with prejudice.

Entry area of Second Harvest of Silicon Valley headquarters, distribution, and warehouse complex at 4553 and 4653 North First Street in north San Jose, concept. (Second Harvest of Silicon Valley)

Organizacion Comunidad de Alviso, a South Bay group headed up by local activist Mark Espinosa, had claimed in its lawsuit that city officials acted improperly when they approved the food bank’s proposed warehouse in north San Jose.

The community group filed its lawsuit in 2022. In June 2023, Santa Clara County Superior Court Judge Sunil Kulkarni dismissed the lawsuit with prejudice.

Now, Second Harvest can proceed with its headquarters and warehouse plans — although the project may well be revised.

“We are continuing to make progress on our new unified headquarters,” Diane Baker Hayward, a spokesperson for Second Harvest of Silicon Valley, said in an email.

San Jose city officials gave final approval to the new office and warehouse complex in August 2022. During the approximately two years since then, the food bank has been evaluating its operational requirements for the new building before it commits to a final design.

The proposed headquarters, office and warehouse complex would be built at 4553 and 4563 North First St. in San Jose’s Alviso district.

“The building will have a similar look and feel to the plans approved in 2022, but we have refined the original building design,” Baker Hayward said.

The new proposal envisions a complex of about 209,000 square feet — about 16 percent smaller than the original 249,200 square feet proposed.

“We realized we can work within a smaller footprint and are proposing adjustments to the approved plans with the city,” Baker Hayward said.

The number of employees, volunteers, vehicles, trucks, or trips won’t increase as a result of the shift in plans project, according to Baker Hayward.

“We were also able to include more parking spaces to ensure we can accommodate volunteers during their various shifts,” Baker Hayward said.

The revamped plans for a new headquarters emerge at a time when Second Harvest has decided to shut its warehouse at 528 Brennan St. in San Jose because it was facing a rent hike there.

The nonprofit has been using the warehouse for volunteer production shifts and to store equipment, supplies and food.

A timeline wasn’t immediately available as to when Second Harvest might begin construction on the new San Jose complex, which the nonprofit purchased in 2022 for $37.2 million.

It made sense for Second Harvest to pursue a smaller and potentially less costly project, according to the organization.

“As a nonprofit, we are focused on managing our costs and using donor dollars in the most impactful way,” Baker Hayward said.

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