Location comparison

Union City Industrial vs Fremont Pacific Commons

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

Quick read

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
Commercial environment

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.
Tenant decision examples

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
Decision qualities

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.

Business fit

Best fit by district

Union City Industrial

I-880 warehouse/flex corridor

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

Service-commercial industrial market

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
Warehouse/flex context

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
Decision guidance

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
Continue comparing

Review each district guide

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