Showing posts with label wednesday wishlist. Show all posts
Showing posts with label wednesday wishlist. Show all posts

Wednesday, May 29, 2024

Wednesday Wishlist: Universal Studios San Jose?

I haven't done a proper Wednesday Wishlist post in years, but I saw something in the Catalyze SV newsletter that got me thinking. The Pleasant Hills Golf Course in East San Jose has sat vacant for ages--114 acres of prime space rotting away unused. Catalyze SV has several prudent suggestions for what this space can be utilized for such as affordable housing and open space. However, I wanted to throw out a wild idea.

San Jose has been doing more than it's fair share of adding housing in Silicon Valley and is one of two cities in the South Bay that is not resistant to building high-rise housing. There is plenty of space and opportunity for infill housing throughout San Jose, but it is extremely rare to have this much contiguous space anywhere.

So my crazy idea is to utilize the space for large-scale entertainment. It was a golf course in the past, why not a theme park?

Great America is shutting down to build housing in a matter of years and we almost lost Raging Waters this year--which is already only a seasonal park. Side note that Raging Waters is being renamed to CalBunga Waterpark and is right next door to this vacant land. One of the biggest criticisms of the San Jose area is lack of things to do... so why not use this space for fun and entertainment.



You might be thinking that this couldn't possibly be enough land for a legitimate theme park. However, it is more than enough. You can see it's size in relation to CalBunga and Cunningham Lake above. 

Again, this is 114 acres. Universal Studios has just proposed a new theme park resort concept in Waco, Texas that is oriented for kids under 13-years old. Think of it as the next step above Happy Hollow. It's being built right in the middle of a residential area and is oriented in a way where most of the rides are indoors and the buildings themselves will minimize noise travelling outside the park. 

The entire space including a hotel, surface-level guest parking, employee parking, and room for expansion comes out to be 97 acres.


Okay, but what about a theme park for everyone including adults and teens? One of the most efficiently laid out theme parks I have been to is Universal Studios Singapore. It features a dozen major attractions for all ages, is beautifully themed, and has multiple hotels connected to the property. The park itself is only 62 acres. They also have an aquarium, casino, and other attractions that would all fit within the envelope of this space.


It seems like Universal Studios is now taking some risks and is aggressively expanding. They are building one of the largest and most immersive parks in Florida, have a new concept coming to Las Vegas, and are pushing for a new park in the London area. Building something in the affluent Silicon Valley area could be an interesting opportunity. Any hotels could also serve a dual or triple purpose to support conventions and business travel. This area is only a 12 minute drive away from Downtown San Jose and the San Jose Convention Center.

This is obviously a long shot, but I've seen stranger ideas come to life!

Wednesday, October 25, 2023

San Jose Wishlist - Halloween in the Park (Part XV)

As Halloween approaches, it is time to resurrect one of my top event wishlist items for San Jose. "Halloween in the Park."

Halloween is my favorite holiday of the year. It's the one day where you get to interact with your neighbors and the wider community. The level of creativity in decorations and costumes is also the most eclectic and interesting out of all the holidays for me--whether that's for trick-or-treating, Halloween parties, or work events.

In October it's tradition for The San Jose Blog have a wish-list post for Halloween in the Park. The idea is to build on the momentum that Christmas in the Park brings to San Jose each year and create something of similar scale for the month of October. A lot of the infrastructure such as wiring, lighting, and booths might even be able to be shared between the events. The goal would be to make Downtown San Jose the epicenter of October Halloween experiences, much as it is today with Christmas in the Park.

Below you will find brainstorming ideas we have collected for this concept so far over the years. Please have a look and provide your feedback and suggestions in the comments or on X (Twitter). Thanks!





The largest draw to Downtown San Jose for many years now has been Christmas in the Park. It has continued to grow year after year and brings in visitors from all over the Bay Area. It's economic impact is substantial and helps keep many Downtown businesses and restaurants alive.

What would you think about a similar event for Halloween? Picture Downtown lit up in orange and purple with elaborate Halloween displays assembled by local artists. Perhaps infrastructure could even be shared with Christmas in the Park (e.g. retail booths). A strong event in October would help maintain traffic between the summer months and Christmas in the Park. 
Here are the ideas we have so far:
  • Animated Halloween Displays
    • Created by local artists
    • Analogous to the Christmas displays that attract many families during Christmas in the Park (almost half a million visitors)
    • Family friendly so that everyone can enjoy it (PG/PG13, perhaps around the same level as Great America Halloween Haunt)
    • Halloween Lighting
      • Orange, purple, and green LED lighting on trees
      • May be possible to use programmable LED lighting that can go from Halloween colors to Christmas colors with the push of a button, allowing the lights to stay up for Christmas in the Park as well and reducing setup/take-down costs.
    • Halloween Food
      • Booths with candied apples, chocolates, candy, pumpkin seeds, etc.
      • Food trucks
      • Trick-or-treating station - a free piece of candy to anyone wearing a costume any day in October (could also be used to hand out promotional flyers for Downtown events/businesses/resources)
    • Retail Booths selling Halloween items, for example:
      • Artwork (paintings, glass pumpkins, etc.)
      • Home decor/crafts like candles
      • Light-up hats/necklaces/bracelets
      • Costumes
      • Zombie/Halloween make-up station 
    • Halloween-themed Carnival Games
      • Pirates of Emerson and Candlelighters (Fremont) do a good job of providing family-friendly games themed around Halloween
      • A handful of children's rides could also be added to the Paseo and reused for Christmas in the Park
    • Interactive Art
      • Subzero/ZERO1-style, but with a Halloween spin.
      • Halloween-themed video game kiosks and/or arcades
    • Pumpkins
      • Instead of the sponsored Christmas trees in Christmas in the Park, how about decorated Pumpkins (can even be Styrofoam so there is no mess/decay)?
      • Pumpkin carving station for families. 
      • Pumpkin carving contest.
    • Costumed Entertainers
      • Walking around the area, not necessarily scaring people but adding to the ambiance and providing photo opportunities for families
    • Haunts / Mazes
      • Would be ideal if these were nearby, perhaps in vacant retails spaces, surface parking lots, the San Jose Convention Center tent, or at SJSU.
      • Could partners with one of the established San Jose haunt providers such as the Winchestor Mystery House or The Bernal SCREAM.
    • Potential Events
      • Zombie Crawl / 5k Run
      • Dia De Los Muertos Events (already quite a few today)
      • Halloween/Dia De Los Muertos Bike Party
      • Horror Movie Trivia Contest
      • Weekly horror movie screening (perhaps in the Circle of Palms area?)
      • Costume Ball
      • Pet costume contests and pet-friendly events

      Monday, October 31, 2022

      Happy Halloween 2022!! + Halloween in the Park (Part XIV)

      Happy Halloween everyone, hope you have a blast tonight! This might be the first Halloween in 3 years where the event is back full-force! Halloween is my favorite "holiday" of the year. It's the one day where you get to interact with your neighbors and the wider community. The level of creativity in decorations and costumes is also the most eclectic and interesting out of all the holidays for me--whether that's for trick-or-treating, Halloween parties, or work events.

      Usually in October we have a wish-list post for Halloween in the Park. The idea is to build on the momentum that Christmas in the Park brings to San Jose each year and create something of similar scale for the month of October with Halloween in the Park! A lot of the infrastructure such as wiring, lighting, and booths might even be able to be shared between the events. The goal would be to make Downtown San Jose the epicenter of October Halloween experiences.

      Below you will find brainstorming ideas we have collected for this concept so far over the years. Please have a look and provide your feedback and suggestions in the comments. Thanks!




      The largest draw to Downtown San Jose for many years now has been Christmas in the Park. It has continued to grow year after year and brings in visitors from all over the Bay Area. It's economic impact is substantial and helps keep many Downtown businesses and restaurants alive.

      What would you think about a similar event for Halloween? Picture Downtown lit up in orange and purple with elaborate Halloween displays assembled by local artists. Perhaps infrastructure could even be shared with Christmas in the Park (e.g. retail booths). A strong event in October would help maintain traffic between the summer months and Christmas in the Park. 
      Here are the ideas we have so far:
      • Animated Halloween Displays
        • Created by local artists
        • Analogous to the Christmas displays that attract many families during Christmas in the Park (almost half a million visitors)
        • Family friendly so that everyone can enjoy it (PG/PG13, perhaps around the same level as Great America Halloween Haunt)
        • Halloween Lighting
          • Orange, purple, and green LED lighting on trees
          • May be possible to use new programmable LED lighting that can go from Halloween colors to Christmas colors with the push of a button, allowing the lights to stay up for Christmas in the Park as well and reducing setup/take-down costs.
        • Halloween Food
          • Booths with candied apples, chocolates, candy, pumpkin seeds, etc.
          • Food trucks
          • Trick-or-treating station - a free piece of candy to anyone wearing a costume any day in October (could also be used to hand out promotional flyers for Downtown events/businesses/resources)
        • Retail Booths selling Halloween items, for example:
          • Artwork (paintings, glass pumpkins, etc.)
          • Home decor/crafts like candles
          • Light-up hats/necklaces/bracelets
          • Costumes
          • Zombie/Halloween make-up station 
        • Halloween-themed Carnival Games
          • Pirates of Emerson and Candlelighters (Fremont) do a good job of providing family-friendly games themed around Halloween
          • A handful of children's rides could also be added to the Paseo and reused for Christmas in the Park
        • Interactive Art
          • Subzero/ZERO1-style, but with a Halloween spin.
          • Halloween-themed video game kiosks and/or arcades
        • Pumpkins
          • Instead of the sponsored Christmas trees in Christmas in the Park, how about decorated Pumpkins (can even be Styrofoam so there is no mess/decay)?
          • Pumpkin carving station for families. 
          • Pumpkin carving contest.
        • Costumed Entertainers
          • Walking around the area, not necessarily scaring people but adding to the ambiance and providing photo opportunities for families
        • Haunts / Mazes
          • Would be ideal if these were nearby, perhaps in vacant retails spaces, surface parking lots, the San Jose Convention Center tent, or at SJSU.
          • Could partners with one of the established San Jose haunt providers such as Deadtime Dreams or The World's Largest Haunted House.
        • Potential Events
          • Zombie-O-Rama can be used to kick off Halloween in the Park (late Sep. / early Oct. time-frame)
          • Zombie Crawl
          • Dia De Los Muertos Events
          • Halloween/Dia De Los Muertos Bike Party
          • Horror Movie Trivia Contest
          • Weekly horror movie screening (perhaps in the Circle of Palms area?)
          • Costume Ball
          • Pet costume contests and pet-friendly events

          Sunday, October 31, 2021

          Happy Halloween 2021!! + Halloween in the Park (Part XIII)

          Happy Halloween everyone, hope you have a blast tonight! I'm optimistic today will mark some return to some normalcy after a brutal two years.

          Usually in October we have a wish-list post for Halloween in the Park. The idea is to build on the momentum that Christmas in the Park brings to San Jose each year and create something of similar scale for the month of October with Halloween in the Park! A lot of the infrastructure such as wiring, lighting, and booths might even be able to be shared between the events. The goal would be to make Downtown San Jose the epicenter of October Halloween experiences.

          Below you will find brainstorming ideas we have collected for this concept so far over the years. Please have a look and provide your feedback and suggestions in the comments. Thanks!




          The largest draw to Downtown San Jose for many years now has been Christmas in the Park. It has continued to grow year after year and brings in visitors from all over the Bay Area. It's economic impact is substantial and helps keep many Downtown businesses and restaurants alive.

          What would you think about a similar event for Halloween? Picture Downtown lit up in orange and purple with elaborate Halloween displays assembled by local artists. Perhaps infrastructure could even be shared with Christmas in the Park (e.g. retail booths). A strong event in October would help maintain traffic between the summer months and Christmas in the Park. 
          Here are the ideas we have so far:
          • Animated Halloween Displays
            • Created by local artists
            • Analogous to the Christmas displays that attract many families during Christmas in the Park (almost half a million visitors)
            • Family friendly so that everyone can enjoy it (PG/PG13, perhaps around the same level as Great America Halloween Haunt)
            • Halloween Lighting
              • Orange, purple, and green LED lighting on trees
              • May be possible to use new programmable LED lighting that can go from Halloween colors to Christmas colors with the push of a button, allowing the lights to stay up for Christmas in the Park as well and reducing setup/take-down costs.
            • Halloween Food
              • Booths with candied apples, chocolates, candy, pumpkin seeds, etc.
              • Food trucks
              • Trick-or-treating station - a free piece of candy to anyone wearing a costume any day in October (could also be used to hand out promotional flyers for Downtown events/businesses/resources)
            • Retail Booths selling Halloween items, for example:
              • Artwork (paintings, glass pumpkins, etc.)
              • Home decor/crafts like candles
              • Light-up hats/necklaces/bracelets
              • Costumes
              • Zombie/Halloween make-up station 
            • Halloween-themed Carnival Games
              • Pirates of Emerson and Candlelighters (Fremont) do a good job of providing family-friendly games themed around Halloween
              • A handful of children's rides could also be added to the Paseo and reused for Christmas in the Park
            • Interactive Art
              • Subzero/ZERO1-style, but with a Halloween spin.
              • Halloween-themed video game kiosks and/or arcades
            • Pumpkins
              • Instead of the sponsored Christmas trees in Christmas in the Park, how about decorated Pumpkins (can even be Styrofoam so there is no mess/decay)?
              • Pumpkin carving station for families. 
              • Pumpkin carving contest.
            • Costumed Entertainers
              • Walking around the area, not necessarily scaring people but adding to the ambiance and providing photo opportunities for families
            • Haunts / Mazes
              • Would be ideal if these were nearby, perhaps in vacant retails spaces, surface parking lots, the San Jose Convention Center tent, or at SJSU.
              • Could partners with one of the established San Jose haunt providers such as Deadtime Dreams or The World's Largest Haunted House.
            • Potential Events
              • Zombie-O-Rama can be used to kick off Halloween in the Park (late Sep. / early Oct. time-frame)
              • Zombie Crawl
              • Dia De Los Muertos Events
              • Halloween/Dia De Los Muertos Bike Party
              • Horror Movie Trivia Contest
              • Weekly horror movie screening (perhaps in the Circle of Palms area?)
              • Costume Ball
              • Pet costume contests and pet-friendly events

              Thursday, October 31, 2019

              Happy Halloween 2019!! + Halloween in the Park (Part XII)

              Happy Halloween everyone, hope you have a blast tonight!

              Usually in October we have a wish-list post for Halloween in the Park. The idea is to build on the momentum that Christmas in the Park brings to San Jose each year and create something of similar scale for the month of October with Halloween in the Park! A lot of the infrastructure such as wiring, lighting, and booths might even be able to be shared between the events. The goal would be to make Downtown San Jose the epicenter of October Halloween experiences.

              Below you will find brainstorming ideas we have collected for this concept so far over the years. Please have a look and provide your feedback and suggestions in the comments. Thanks!




              The largest draw to Downtown San Jose for many years now has been Christmas in the Park. It has continued to grow year after year and brings in visitors from all over the Bay Area. It's economic impact is substantial and helps keep many Downtown businesses and restaurants alive.

              What would you think about a similar event for Halloween? Picture Downtown lit up in orange and purple with elaborate Halloween displays assembled by local artists. Perhaps infrastructure could even be shared with Christmas in the Park (e.g. retail booths). A strong event in October would help maintain traffic between the summer months and Christmas in the Park. 
              Here are the ideas we have so far:
              • Animated Halloween Displays
                • Created by local artists
                • Analogous to the Christmas displays that attract many families during Christmas in the Park (almost half a million visitors)
                • Family friendly so that everyone can enjoy it (PG/PG13, perhaps around the same level as Great America Halloween Haunt)
                • Halloween Lighting
                  • Orange, purple, and green LED lighting on trees
                  • May be possible to use new programmable LED lighting that can go from Halloween colors to Christmas colors with the push of a button, allowing the lights to stay up for Christmas in the Park as well and reducing setup/take-down costs.
                • Halloween Food
                  • Booths with candied apples, chocolates, candy, pumpkin seeds, etc.
                  • Food trucks
                  • Trick-or-treating station - a free piece of candy to anyone wearing a costume any day in October (could also be used to hand out promotional flyers for Downtown events/businesses/resources)
                • Retail Booths selling Halloween items, for example:
                  • Artwork (paintings, glass pumpkins, etc.)
                  • Home decor/crafts like candles
                  • Light-up hats/necklaces/bracelets
                  • Costumes
                  • Zombie/Halloween make-up station 
                • Halloween-themed Carnival Games
                  • Pirates of Emerson and Candlelighters (Fremont) do a good job of providing family-friendly games themed around Halloween
                  • A handful of children's rides could also be added to the Paseo and reused for Christmas in the Park
                • Interactive Art
                  • Subzero/ZERO1-style, but with a Halloween spin.
                  • Halloween-themed video game kiosks and/or arcades
                • Pumpkins
                  • Instead of the sponsored Christmas trees in Christmas in the Park, how about decorated Pumpkins (can even be Styrofoam so there is no mess/decay)?
                  • Pumpkin carving station for families. 
                  • Pumpkin carving contest.
                • Costumed Entertainers
                  • Walking around the area, not necessarily scaring people but adding to the ambiance and providing photo opportunities for families
                • Haunts / Mazes
                  • Would be ideal if these were nearby, perhaps in vacant retails spaces, surface parking lots, the San Jose Convention Center tent, or at SJSU.
                  • Could partners with one of the established San Jose haunt providers such as Deadtime Dreams or The World's Largest Haunted House.
                • Potential Events
                  • Zombie-O-Rama can be used to kick off Halloween in the Park (late Sep. / early Oct. time-frame)
                  • Zombie Crawl
                  • Dia De Los Muertos Events
                  • Halloween/Dia De Los Muertos Bike Party
                  • Horror Movie Trivia Contest
                  • Weekly horror movie screening (perhaps in the Circle of Palms area?)
                  • Costume Ball

                  Tuesday, April 16, 2019

                  Bay Area Michelin Star Restaurants - 2019 Edition

                  The Michelin guide is the most renowned rubric in the world for measuring culinary success. Unfortunately, we have some bad news this year. San Jose's first and only Michelin Star restaurant, Adega in Little Portugal, lost its star after holding the honor for two years. It's unclear why, although it is still featured in the guide as a recommended restaurant.

                  Michelin has three different star categories:
                  • One Star - A very good restaurant in its category with cuisine prepared to a consistently high standard. A good place to stop on your journey.
                  • Two Stars - Excellent cuisine, skillfully and carefully crafted dishes of outstanding quality. Worth a detour.
                  • Three Stars - Exceptional cuisine with distinctive dishes and superlative ingredients. Worth a special journey.
                  There are also restaurants in the Michelin guide that do not get a star, but are considered "Michelin Recommended." This is already a significant honor that a very small percentage of restaurants achieve. Within this category San Jose scored a total of 8 restaurants, which is up two from last year (one is Adega). Luna Mexican Kitchen on the Alameda is the newcomer. Fortunately we we did not lose any Michelin recommended restaurants this year.


                  San Jose Michelin Recommended Restaurants:
                  • Downtown
                    • Back A Yard
                  • East San Jose
                    • Adega
                  • Midtown
                    • Luna Mexican Kitchen
                    • Din Tai Fung
                    • Walia
                  • South San Jose
                    • Thien Long
                    • Lau Hai San
                  • Camden
                    • Zeni

                  I also created a Google doc listing all of the star recipients for 2019, along with tabs for all previous years and some general statistics. Below is an image capture from the doc. This year there were a total of 57 restaurants that were awarded Michelin stars, which is up 2 from last year and an all-time high for the Bay Area. 63% of the restaurants are locating in SF, 18% in Silicon Valley (split evenly between the South Bay and the Peninsula), 16% in Wine Country, 2% in the East Bay, and 2% in Marin. This is the first time ever where Silicon Valley has more Michelin Star restaurants than Wine Country. There are 5 new restaurants on the list for 2019 and 3 that did not make the cut or were closed down. The only new starred restaurant on the list from Silicon Valley is Protege in Palo Alto.

                  Source: Michelin Guide

                  Wednesday, October 17, 2018

                  Wednesday Wishlist: Halloween in the Park (Part XI)

                  Keeping with San Jose Blog tradition, in October we have a "wishlist" post for Halloween in the Park. The idea is to build on the momentum that Christmas in the Park brings to San Jose each year and create something of similar scale for the month of October with Halloween in the Park! A lot of the infrastructure such as wiring, lighting, and booths might even be able to be shared between the events. The goal would be to make Downtown San Jose the epicenter of October Halloween experiences.

                  Below you will find brainstorming ideas we have collected for this concept so far over the years. Please have a look and provide your feedback and suggestions in the comments. Thanks!




                  The largest draw to Downtown San Jose for many years now has been Christmas in the Park. It has continued to grow year after year and brings in visitors from all over the Bay Area. It's economic impact is substantial and helps keep many Downtown businesses and restaurants alive.

                  What would you think about a similar event for Halloween? Picture Downtown lit up in orange and purple with elaborate Halloween displays assembled by local artists. Perhaps infrastructure could even be shared with Christmas in the Park (e.g. retail booths). A strong event in October would help maintain traffic between the summer months and Christmas in the Park. 
                  Here are the ideas we have so far:
                  • Animated Halloween Displays
                    • Created by local artists
                    • Analogous to the Christmas displays that attract many families during Christmas in the Park (almost half a million visitors)
                    • Family friendly so that everyone can enjoy it (PG/PG13, perhaps around the same level as Great America Halloween Haunt)
                    • Halloween Lighting
                      • Orange, purple, and green LED lighting on trees
                      • May be possible to use new programmable LED lighting that can go from Halloween colors to Christmas colors with the push of a button, allowing the lights to stay up for Christmas in the Park as well and reducing setup/take-down costs.
                    • Halloween Food
                      • Booths with candied apples, chocolates, candy, pumpkin seeds, etc.
                      • Food trucks
                      • Trick-or-treating station - a free piece of candy to anyone wearing a costume any day in October (could also be used to hand out promotional flyers for Downtown events/businesses/resources)
                    • Retail Booths selling Halloween items, for example:
                      • Artwork (paintings, glass pumpkins, etc.)
                      • Home decor/crafts like candles
                      • Light-up hats/necklaces/bracelets
                      • Costumes
                      • Zombie/Halloween make-up station 
                    • Halloween-themed Carnival Games
                      • Pirates of Emerson and Candlelighters (Fremont) do a good job of providing family-friendly games themed around Halloween
                      • A handful of children's rides could also be added to the Paseo and reused for Christmas in the Park
                    • Interactive Art
                      • Subzero/ZERO1-style, but with a Halloween spin.
                      • Halloween-themed video game kiosks and/or arcades
                    • Pumpkins
                      • Instead of the sponsored Christmas trees in Christmas in the Park, how about decorated Pumpkins (can even be Styrofoam so there is no mess/decay)?
                      • Pumpkin carving station for families. 
                      • Pumpkin carving contest.
                    • Costumed Entertainers
                      • Walking around the area, not necessarily scaring people but adding to the ambiance and providing photo opportunities for families
                    • Haunts / Mazes
                      • Would be ideal if these were nearby, perhaps in vacant retails spaces, surface parking lots, the San Jose Convention Center tent, or at SJSU.
                      • Could partners with one of the established San Jose haunt providers such as Deadtime Dreams or The World's Largest Haunted House.
                    • Potential Events
                      • Zombie-O-Rama can be used to kick off Halloween in the Park (late Sep. / early Oct. time-frame)
                      • Zombie Crawl
                      • Dia De Los Muertos Events
                      • Halloween/Dia De Los Muertos Bike Party
                      • Horror Movie Trivia Contest
                      • Weekly horror movie screening (perhaps in the Circle of Palms area?)
                      • Costume Ball