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Chick-fil-A’s San Carlos Project: Redevelopment at the Expense of Community

Updated: Sep 9

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The fights not over, on Wednesday, the City signed off on a plan that looks good on paper but fails our neighborhood and community in practice: a new Chick-fil-A at West San Carlos and Race Street.  This is in spite of the original planning commission findings that would preserve the existing buildings.


Yes, the corner lot at 1301 W. San Carlos has sat vacant for years. Redeveloping it makes sense and we do desperately want that. But this project doesn’t stop there. Instead of building only on the empty parcel, the plan expands north onto 255–263 Race Street—land already occupied by two well-used, decades-old businesses: a restaurant and a hair salon. Under Chick-fil-A’s blueprint, both will be demolished, erasing active storefronts that continue to serve the community and replacing them with a parking lot!


This is the heart of the problem. The City’s West San Carlos Urban Village Plan emphasizes protecting existing commercial spaces and creating a vibrant, diverse business corridor. Paving over small, neighborhood-serving shops to make room for a national fast-food chain is the opposite of that vision. It reduces variety, undermines local entrepreneurs, and weakens the fabric of the district.


The Planning Department understood this tension when it first reviewed the proposal. Staff initially approved development on the vacant lot but restricted demolition of the occupied parcel to protect those businesses (attached). Now, that safeguard is gone. Instead of encouraging smart infill, San José is greenlighting a project that trades two functioning businesses for another drive-up restaurant in a corridor already overrun with auto-centric development disregarding the cities stated desire to help move people out of cars and towards alternative transit methods. Blocks from VTA and CalTrain, adjacent to local bus routes and residential properties, and yards away from bike-share this plot does not need an over-sized parking lot; it should support the community and the future of our city!


This isn’t revitalization. It’s displacement. It’s a short-term deal that benefits a corporate chain while hollowing out the neighborhood’s long-term vitality. We deserve investment that builds on what we already have—not bulldozes it.


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