Location comparison

Richmond Industrial vs Hayward Industrial

Compare which commercial district is a better fit before narrowing to specific spaces.

Quick read

Which district fits better?

Richmond Industrial

Choose this district if:

  • Warehouse, manufacturing, contractor, and service-industrial users needing East Bay reach
  • Businesses comparing Richmond with San Leandro, Hayward, and Oakland industrial areas
  • Operations teams that value freeway access and functional building formats over office identity

Hayward Industrial

Choose this district if:

  • Warehouse, distribution, light manufacturing, and service-industrial users that need central East Bay access
  • Companies comparing Hayward with San Leandro, Union City, Fremont, and Oakland industrial alternatives
  • Operators that value truck access, freeway reach, and functional industrial buildings more than office-district identity
Commercial environment

How the districts differ

  • Richmond Industrial is stronger for northern East Bay industrial reach and I-80/I-580 positioning.
  • Hayward Industrial is stronger for central I-880 reach, Highway 92 access, and East Bay/Peninsula distribution.
  • Both are functional industrial markets, but they solve different regional access problems.
Tenant decision examples

Why companies choose each location

Richmond Industrial

  • Warehouse, manufacturing, service-industrial, yard, and logistics users needing northern East Bay reach
  • Businesses that value I-80/I-580 positioning and Richmond industrial infrastructure
  • Operations serving Contra Costa, North Bay, Berkeley/Oakland, and northern East Bay customers

Hayward Industrial

  • Regional distribution, food logistics, manufacturing, and warehouse/flex users needing central I-880 reach
  • Companies that need Highway 92 and San Mateo Bridge access toward the Peninsula
  • Operators comparing East Bay industrial depth with South Bay and Tri-City access
Decision qualities

How to compare the tradeoffs

Freeway access

Richmond Industrial: I-80/I-580 northern East Bay orientation.

Hayward Industrial: Central I-880 plus Highway 92 and bridge access.

Port access

Richmond Industrial: Stronger Richmond port-adjacent and northern industrial context.

Hayward Industrial: More mid-Bay and airport/bridge oriented than port-oriented.

Warehouse / distribution suitability

Richmond Industrial: Strong for northern East Bay warehouse, yard, and manufacturing users.

Hayward Industrial: Strong for central East Bay distribution and manufacturing users.

Regional labor access

Richmond Industrial: Better for Richmond, Contra Costa, Berkeley, and northern East Bay labor.

Hayward Industrial: Better for Hayward, Union City, Fremont, and Peninsula bridge reach.

Relative pricing

Richmond Industrial: Often framed around functional northern industrial value.

Hayward Industrial: Often valued for central corridor and Peninsula access utility.

Business fit

Best fit by district

Richmond Industrial

east_bay_industrial_logistics_district

Richmond Industrial is a practical East Bay industrial and logistics district for warehouse, manufacturing, contractor, and service-commercial users that need I-80, I-580, port-adjacent, and northern East Bay access.

  • Warehouse, manufacturing, contractor, and service-industrial users needing East Bay reach
  • Businesses comparing Richmond with San Leandro, Hayward, and Oakland industrial areas
  • Operations teams that value freeway access and functional building formats over office identity

Hayward Industrial

I-880 warehouse/flex corridor

Hayward Industrial is a central I-880 warehouse, manufacturing, logistics, and flex district shaped by Industrial Boulevard, Clawiter Road, Cabot Boulevard, Highway 92, and access toward the San Mateo Bridge.

  • Warehouse, distribution, light manufacturing, and service-industrial users that need central East Bay access
  • Companies comparing Hayward with San Leandro, Union City, Fremont, and Oakland industrial alternatives
  • Operators that value truck access, freeway reach, and functional industrial buildings more than office-district identity
Warehouse/flex context

How to think about warehouse/flex fit

Richmond Industrial tends to work better for

  • Industrial users comparing northern East Bay freeway access with Oakland and San Leandro alternatives
  • Businesses that need practical warehouse, manufacturing, or service-commercial space more than office identity

Hayward Industrial tends to work better for

  • Industrial users comparing Oakland/San Leandro access with Fremont and South Bay reach
  • Companies that need central East Bay logistics and manufacturing utility without Silicon Valley pricing signals
Decision guidance

Less ideal for

Richmond Industrial

  • Client-facing office firms that need a polished downtown or transit-core setting
  • Retailers depending on walkable street traffic
  • Technology users seeking a stronger Emeryville or Berkeley life-science / R&D environment

Hayward Industrial

  • Client-facing office users that need a polished downtown or transit-oriented setting
  • Retail-first businesses that depend on pedestrian visibility or lifestyle amenities
  • Advanced R&D users that need a stronger Silicon Valley campus or innovation signal
Continue comparing

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