By the beginning of next month, California’s $3 billion stem
cell research effort expects to be safely ensconced in its new headquarters in
Oakland, once the stomping grounds of author Jack London and actor Tom Hanks
and still the home of California Gov. Jerry Brown.
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Building housing new HQ of CIRM |
The move will cost about $1.8 million, according to the
agency, which says it will save money over the long term compared to staying in San
Francisco, across the bay from Oakland.
The cost of office space in San Francisco is soaring, fueled by tech
firms awash in cash.
The California Institute for Regenerative Medicine (CIRM),
as the agency is formally known, has enjoyed a rent-free, 10-year stay in what
is now a sizzling real estate location in San Francisco. The agency’s offices
were provided as part of an $18 million package offered by San Francisco, which
was competing with other cities in California.
Maria Bonneville, CIRM’s director of administration, said in an email last month to the California Stem Cell Report,
“Given the cost of remaining at our current location, we had
no choice but to move.”
(The full text of her email is here.)
Figures in Bonneville’s email show that the move will cost
an estimated $1.8 million, including $828,300 in tenant improvements. The
landlord will pay an additional $891,520 for the improvements, which will total
about $1.7 million. The next largest expense in the move, scheduled for the
Friday after Thanksgiving, is $371,043 worth of new furniture.
Bonneville said the existing furniture, again donated, is 10
years old, not ergonomic and will not fit in the new space, which totals 17,000
square feet instead of the current 19,500.
Some CIRM staffers will be losing their offices. The new space
is slated for only 12 private offices compared to 39 at the current location.
Bonneville said,
“Although CIRM will incur some one-time costs as a result of
its relocation, we believe that the space is better designed to facilitate the
CIRM team’s execution of CIRM 2.0 and beyond, and CIRM will realize more than
$2 million in savings over the course of the lease compared to the costs of
remaining in its current space.”
She said,
“Indeed, even at $75 per square foot for our current
space, in the first year alone, CIRM will save approximately $1 million in rent
($501,569 in Oakland compared to approximately $1.5 million (19,500 sq. ft. x
$75).
Bonneville elaborated,
“Over the next five years and four months, CIRM would pay
approximately $8 million to remain in its current office space. The costs
for rent in Oakland will be approximately $3.975 million (assuming CIRM
occupies the entire premises, including the 15th floor, for the full
term). Thus, even with CIRM bearing some of the costs of tenant
improvements and other one-time relocation expenses, CIRM will realize
substantial savings from the move and it will occupy space that is better
designed to achieve the agency’s mission.”
The agency has space on two floors of a building at 1999 Harrison Street with
the lease on the 15th floor running three years and five years on the 16th. The
agency is currently projected to run out of funds for new awards in 2020 and
may see its current budgeted staff of about 55 shrink as that year approaches.
Capturing the headquarters of California’s world-renown
stem cell agency is a nice score for Oakland. It has long been a poor cousin to
San Francisco, lacking the glitter and romance of the city that was once known
as Baghdad-by-the-Bay. No one sang about “losing their heart" in Oakland, as
Tony Bennett has famously done about San Francisco.
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Oakland, 1901. CIRM's new HQ is on Lake Merritt, shown
at the lower left of the map. |
But Oakland has its share of stories, famous personages and
interesting history. Huey Newton, a co-founder of the Black Panthers, grew up
in the city, along with Ed Meese, former U.S. attorney general and close
advisor to former President Reagan. Clint Eastwood had his roots in Oakland in addition to Tom Hanks. Jerry Brown was mayor of Oakland for eight years. He still has his voting
residence in that city.
The site of CIRM’s new offices on Lake Merritt was once an
important location for the Huchin tribe, which lived there for thousands of
years.
Rocky Road ice cream was created
in Oakland in 1929. During World War II,
the city was an important shipbuilding and food processing hub. The mai tai
cocktail was first concocted in Oakland in 1944,
according to Wikipedia. Misconduct
by the Oakland police department led the city to pay $57 million from 2001 to
2011 to alleged victims, the largest sum of any city in California, according
to local television station
KTVU.
Today the city is the home of
Golden State Warriors, the
National Basketball Association champions, who have played there since 1971,
eschewing, however, the designation of “Oakland Warriors.” The Warriors are
scheduled to leave Oakland in 2018, taking up residence in a
$1 billion, combined basketball palace/commercial development, ironically only a short
distance from the current offices of the stem cell agency. Some
UC San Francisco scientists and others oppose the development because they fear it
will push out biomedical enterprises now in the area and deter others.
As for Jack London, a section of Oakland bears his
name. As a boy, Jack London “studied”
there in a saloon called the
“First and Last Chance,” according to legend, and drank there, presumably when he was a little older.
The stem cell agency had its first chance in San Francisco to develop a commercial stem cell therapy. Now, its last chance may be in Oakland,
only about a 30 minute walk from Jack London's waterfront watering hole.