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City Center Building

Former city hall in Hayward, California

City Center Building

Former city hall in Hayward, California

FieldValue
nameCity Center Building
former_namesCentennial Tower
statusAbandoned
imageCity Center Buliding.jpg
image_size250px
captionHayward City Center Building
building_typeCity hall
Business offices
ownerMika Realty of Los Angeles
location22300 Foothill Boulevard
coordinates
start_date1966
completion_date1969
opened_dateOctober 18, 1969
closing_date1998
demolition_date2020
floor_count11
architectMitchell Van Bourg

Business offices

The City Center Building, known locally as Centennial Hall, was the tallest building in Hayward, California. It was previously the second tallest, until the 2013 razing of Warren Hall on the Cal State East Bay campus. It was for many years an abandoned building, located between Foothill Boulevard and City Center Drive, in the City Center section of Downtown Hayward, adjacent to the PlazaCenter mall. It was formerly used as Hayward City Hall.

Demolition of the building began in January 2020 and was completed by September 2020.

History

The City of Hayward opened the steel reinforced concrete building on October 18, 1969. It was originally planned to have 20 floors and a cinema, but only 11 floors were built, with no cinema. The building served as Hayward's city hall from 1969 to 1998. Its top floor was the seat of municipal government and other floors were leased to businesses. It was designed to replace the old Hayward city hall, now located at Alex Giulini Plaza. It was the first building in the planned City Center complex. Architectural critic Allan Temko nicknamed the building "the toaster" in the 1970s, strongly influencing public opinion against it. The Centennial Hall Convention Center was added to the complex.

In the 1980s, the PlazaCenter complex of retail and commercial businesses was built next to it, on the former grounds of Hayward High School.

The 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake damaged the building's structural integrity and the city government moved out of the building.{{cite news | last = O'Brien | first = Matt In 1998, after the completion of the new city hall, the building was closed to the public. The city sold the building for $1.5 million in 1998 to a developer who planned to convert it to condominiums. They renamed it "Centennial Tower" and sold it to another developer. Condominium conversion was never implemented, as it was considered too expensive. In 2006 plans were made to demolish the building. A year later, the demolition was canceled. On November 1, 2009, the adjacent Centennial Hall Convention Center closed, and was subsequently demolished.

New Hayward City Hall

The new City Hall opened in January 1998. It is located at B Street and Watkins Street, next to the Hayward BART station.

City Center Building, showing window damage and graffiti

Later Conditions

The building remained vacant. The interior walls, pipes and heating system have been removed. There were numerous broken or boarded-up windows. Graffiti is visible on the windows and top floors. In January 2008 a fence was erected around the building to deter vandalism. In March 2010 a fire broke out on the top floors of the tower. Homeless people have occupied the first floor, and taken out copper pipes to sell as scrap, as well as setting up makeshift shelters on the upper floors.

evidence of disuse at ground level

Plans for the site

Plans were announced in early 2008 for remodeling the tower, including seismic retrofitting and conversion to office space. There were also plans to build condominiums over the Centennial Hall parking garage, which has also been demolished. The building closed in 2009. In 2010, the city opened bidding for its demolition. Instead of demolition, the site only had hazardous materials removed.

In June 2019, the Hayward City Council approved purchasing the building $5.2 million. Before the end of that year, they approved a $3.9 million demolition contract with Oakland’s Silverado Contractors. No decision had been made about what would happen to the site after the demolition, and the lot remains empty as of January 2026.

References

References

  1. [http://www.hayward-ca.gov/citygov/meetings/cca/1998/cca041498.htm] {{webarchive. link. (June 25, 2010)
  2. (2006-08-20). "Hayward has low opinion of its tallest buildings". Inside Bay Area.
  3. "Vacant Hayward City Hall gains new life - San Francisco Business Times". Bizjournals.com.
  4. (2010-03-19). "Three-Alarm Fire Controlled At Old Hayward City Hall Building". www.ktvu.com.
  5. "Homeless population occupies Downtown Hayward".
  6. (2019-12-19). "Hayward’s tallest building — former city hall — to be torn down".
  7. "Archived copy".
  8. "Homeless population occupies Downtown Hayward".
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