North San Jose vs Stanford Research Park
Compare which commercial district is a better fit before narrowing to specific spaces.
Which district fits better?
North San Jose
Choose this district if:
- Technology, R&D, hardware, and operations teams that need larger floorplates or campus-style buildings
- Office and flex users comparing San Jose access with Santa Clara, Moffett Park, and Milpitas
- Companies that value freeway, airport, and South Bay labor access more than downtown walkability
Stanford Research Park
Choose this district if:
- R&D, life-science-adjacent, technology, and institutional users that benefit from Stanford adjacency
- Companies that need a campus or research-park environment rather than a walkable downtown
- Teams comparing Palo Alto prestige and talent access across downtown and research-park formats
How the districts differ
- North San Jose is broader and more operational, with office, R&D, flex, airport, and supplier-corridor utility.
- Stanford Research Park is more curated, institutional, and Palo Alto-oriented.
- This comparison is useful for technology and R&D users deciding between South Bay scale and Stanford-adjacent positioning.
Best fit by district
North San Jose
North San Jose is a large Silicon Valley office, R&D, and industrial/flex district shaped by airport access, Highway 101, I-880, 237, light rail, and larger-parcel technology campuses.
- Technology, R&D, hardware, and operations teams that need larger floorplates or campus-style buildings
- Office and flex users comparing San Jose access with Santa Clara, Moffett Park, and Milpitas
- Companies that value freeway, airport, and South Bay labor access more than downtown walkability
Stanford Research Park
Stanford Research Park is a Palo Alto research, R&D, and campus-oriented office district shaped by Stanford adjacency, larger parcels, institutional gravity, and a very different format from Downtown Palo Alto.
- R&D, life-science-adjacent, technology, and institutional users that benefit from Stanford adjacency
- Companies that need a campus or research-park environment rather than a walkable downtown
- Teams comparing Palo Alto prestige and talent access across downtown and research-park formats
How to think about office fit
North San Jose tends to work better for
- Technology, R&D, hardware, and operations teams that need larger floorplates or campus-style buildings
- Office and flex users comparing San Jose access with Santa Clara, Moffett Park, and Milpitas
- Companies that value freeway, airport, and South Bay labor access more than downtown walkability
Stanford Research Park tends to work better for
- R&D, life-science-adjacent, technology, and institutional users that benefit from Stanford adjacency
- Companies that need a campus or research-park environment rather than a walkable downtown
- Teams comparing Palo Alto prestige and talent access across downtown and research-park formats
Less ideal for
North San Jose
- Client-facing firms that need a walkable downtown or formal CBD identity
- Small professional-service users that depend on street-level downtown activity
- Retail-first businesses that need dense pedestrian visibility
Stanford Research Park
- Small professional-service firms that need University Avenue foot traffic or client-facing downtown identity
- Warehouse/logistics users seeking industrial functionality
- Retail-first businesses that depend on pedestrian storefront activity
Review each district guide
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Santa Clara Tech Core
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Moffett Park
Compare if a more concentrated Sunnyvale innovation district may fit better than North San Jose's larger corridor pattern.
North Bayshore
Compare if a Mountain View campus ecosystem may fit better than North San Jose's broader office/R&D and flex corridor.
Milpitas Industrial
Compare if warehouse/flex and industrial functionality matter more than office/R&D identity.