Union City Industrial vs Fremont Pacific Commons
Compare which commercial district is a better fit before narrowing to specific spaces.
Which district fits better?
Union City Industrial
Choose this district if:
- Warehouse, flex, service-industrial, and light manufacturing users needing I-880 access
- Companies comparing Hayward industrial depth with Fremont and Silicon Valley adjacency
- Operations teams that value practical building formats and regional reach over a large office ecosystem
Fremont Pacific Commons
Choose this district if:
- Office/flex, service-commercial, showroom, and operations users that benefit from retail adjacency and freeway access
- Companies comparing Fremont customer access with North San Jose and South Bay R&D corridors
- Businesses that want practical commercial buildings near Pacific Commons, Christy Street, and Auto Mall Parkway
How the districts differ
- Union City Industrial is more traditional warehouse/flex and light manufacturing.
- Pacific Commons is more mixed commercial, service, showroom, and retail-adjacent office/flex.
- The decision is usually about operational utility versus Fremont customer-facing visibility and mixed commercial access.
Why companies choose each location
Union City Industrial
- Warehouse, light manufacturing, contractor, and distribution users that need straightforward I-880 industrial utility
- Companies that care more about truck access and functional buildings than retail-adjacent visibility
- Operations teams serving Hayward, Fremont, and Tri-City customers from a compact location
Fremont Pacific Commons
- Office/flex, showroom, service-commercial, and customer-facing operations that benefit from Fremont visibility
- Companies that want I-880 access with retail-adjacent amenities and a more mixed commercial setting
- Teams comparing Fremont customer access with North San Jose or Warm Springs alternatives
How to compare the tradeoffs
Truck circulation
Union City Industrial: More straightforward industrial circulation and warehouse/flex utility.
Fremont Pacific Commons: More mixed with retail, service, and customer-facing traffic.
Customer access
Union City Industrial: Practical for operations serving Tri-City customers.
Fremont Pacific Commons: Stronger for users that benefit from Fremont visibility and customer access.
Building inventory
Union City Industrial: Warehouse, office-warehouse, flex, and light manufacturing buildings.
Fremont Pacific Commons: Office/flex, service-commercial, showroom, and light industrial buildings.
Warehouse / distribution suitability
Union City Industrial: Better for pure warehouse/flex and operational users.
Fremont Pacific Commons: Better for lighter operations that also need visibility.
Relative pricing
Union City Industrial: Usually framed around practical industrial value.
Fremont Pacific Commons: Value is tied more to Fremont visibility and mixed commercial context.
Best fit by district
Union City Industrial
Union City Industrial is a compact I-880 warehouse, flex, and light-manufacturing market between Hayward and Fremont, useful for companies that want East Bay industrial functionality with Tri-City and South Bay reach.
- Warehouse, flex, service-industrial, and light manufacturing users needing I-880 access
- Companies comparing Hayward industrial depth with Fremont and Silicon Valley adjacency
- Operations teams that value practical building formats and regional reach over a large office ecosystem
Fremont Pacific Commons
Fremont Pacific Commons is a mixed commercial, office/flex, service, and retail-adjacent node near I-880 and Auto Mall Parkway, giving tenants a Fremont alternative to North San Jose and Warm Springs.
- Office/flex, service-commercial, showroom, and operations users that benefit from retail adjacency and freeway access
- Companies comparing Fremont customer access with North San Jose and South Bay R&D corridors
- Businesses that want practical commercial buildings near Pacific Commons, Christy Street, and Auto Mall Parkway
How to think about warehouse/flex fit
Union City Industrial tends to work better for
- Users comparing a smaller Tri-City industrial node with deeper Hayward inventory
- Businesses that want I-880 reach without committing fully to Fremont or North San Jose
Fremont Pacific Commons tends to work better for
- Businesses that need Fremont visibility and I-880 access but do not need a heavy industrial district
- Companies comparing retail-adjacent office/flex with North San Jose technology corridor buildings
Less ideal for
Union City Industrial
- Downtown office users that need walkability, transit-core identity, or client-facing amenities
- Large corporate campus users that need a stronger technology district identity
- Retail-first users that need destination foot traffic or lifestyle visibility
Fremont Pacific Commons
- Heavy industrial users needing deep yard, rail, or port-adjacent logistics infrastructure
- Urban office users that need a walkable downtown or Caltrain/BART office-core environment
- Large technology campus users that need a stronger R&D campus identity than Pacific Commons provides
Review each district guide
Businesses comparing these districts also evaluate
Hayward Industrial
Compare if Hayward's larger industrial base and Highway 92 access may fit better.
Fremont
Compare if Fremont's broader R&D, advanced manufacturing, and Silicon Valley-adjacent ecosystem may be more useful.
Fremont Auto Mall Parkway
Compare if showroom, service-commercial, and Fremont customer access are part of the decision.
North San Jose
Compare if South Bay office/R&D corridor identity and airport access may matter more than Fremont mixed commercial access.
Other useful location comparisons
Hayward Industrial vs Union City Industrial
Compare Union City with a deeper central East Bay industrial market.
Fremont Pacific Commons vs Auto Mall Parkway
Compare two Fremont service-commercial and office/flex corridors.
Warm Springs vs Pacific Commons
Compare Fremont innovation/manufacturing identity with mixed commercial access.
Pacific Commons vs North San Jose
Compare Fremont mixed commercial with South Bay office/R&D scale.