Sutter Health Hospital Project

How will it impact Golden Gate?

The proposed Sutter Health complex in Emeryville is slated to begin construction in 2028, with completion expected in 2033. The project includes a 17-story hospital with a helipad, several medical and administrative buildings, a shuttle system within the Horton/Hollis/Stanford/53rd Street boundaries. The project plan also calls for extensive changes to traffic flow at that location to accommodate an estimated 20,000 Sutter-related vehicle trips per day.

Although this regional hospital complex would be located just two blocks from the Golden Gate boundary, numerous public presentations by the Sutter Health team and the City of Emeryville failed to address the likely impacts on Oakland residents and our traffic corridors that would provide direct access to the complex.

At those meetings, Oakland and Emeryville residents questioned the project’s scale and location and called for more specific information about its impacts on both cities, including traffic flow and volume, pedestrian and bicycle safety, noise, air quality, green space, and overall neighborhood livability. Emeryville officials assured attendees that these issues would be addressed through the Environmental Impact Report (EIR) process, which is fast-tracked to begin in early August 2026.

What’s next:

GGCA alerted District 1 Councilmember Zac Unger and Oakland city staff, urging them to promptly investigate the full range of likely project impacts on Oakland and share their findings with the community before the City submits its official comments on the EIR. We have asked them to pay particular attention to existing safety concerns along our traffic corridors and how the Sutter Health project could significantly worsen those conditions.

GGCA will keep you posted on how to participate in the EIR process. In the meantime, you can:

  • Email Councilmember Unger (zunger@oaklandca.gov) with your input on the Sutter Health project.  See GGCA’s letter to him and City officials.
  • Attend the Emeryville City Council Study Session, July 21, 6:00 pm: Your input during the public comment period matters! Location: Emeryville City Hall, 1333 Park Avenue, Second Floor, City Council Chambers.
  • Email GGCA (agennino@gmail.com) your concerns about this project and we’ll add your information to our list below.

More information

Golden Gate residents have contributed the information below about existing safety hazards along our traffic corridors.

1. San Pablo Avenue/Stanford Avenue Corridor
This corridor is already on Oakland’s 2024 High Injury Network and is one of the most dangerous in our city, yet the planned investments in District 1 by the Oakland Department of Transportation (OakDOT) do not include funded safety improvements on Stanford Avenue outside of two bike crossings. There are no speed cushions along several long stretches of Stanford Avenue. Signal enforcement at multiple intersections is virtually absent.  OakDOT has deployed speed safety cameras throughout the High Injury Network, but none are located on Stanford Avenue despite the corridor’s alarming safety problems:

  • Speeding well above the posted speed limit, including racing incidents exceeding 100 miles per hour
  • High-speed vehicle collisions
  • Sideshows at intersections that block vehicular, pedestrian, bicycle, and emergency traffic
  • Blatant running of red lights without stopping for pedestrians in crosswalks

2. 53rd Street Corridor
This corridor is a heavily traveled east-west route for vehicular and bicycle traffic to and from Emeryville because it is the only through street crossing San Pablo Avenue between Stanford Avenue and 40th Street. Safety concerns exist along every segment of this corridor:

  • Adeline Street to San Pablo Avenue: This narrow stretch requires vehicles to drive slowly and give way to larger vehicles moving in the opposite direction.
  • San Pablo Avenue intersection: This offset intersection is difficult and dangerous to navigate, especially during peak traffic periods.
  • West of San Pablo Avenue: The first block is divided between the two cities, with Emeryville’s Anna Yates Elementary School and eastbound traffic on the south side, and Oakland residences and westbound traffic on the north side. This residential Oakland side of the street would become a direct access route for vehicles traveling to the Sutter Health complex two blocks away.

    Traffic chaos at Anna Yates Elementary School during daily drop-off and pick-up periods include:

  • Blocked driveways: Parents routinely park in front of or directly across the driveways of five to six homes. Drivers frequently leave their vehicles unattended while escorting their children onto campus. This occurs daily, often multiple times per day.
  • Contentious exchanges: School parents frequently refuse residents’ requests to move their vehicles from driveways. Confrontations have also occurred among school parents.
  • Child safety risks: Young students frequently cross the street outside designated crosswalks, weaving between bicyclists and moving vehicles.
  • Congestion: Through traffic regularly comes to a standstill during drop-off and pickup periods, preventing Oakland residents from entering or exiting their driveways and accessing street parking.
  • Dangerous passing maneuvers: During peak periods, drivers often pass vehicles by entering the opposing lane of traffic or perform three-point turns while traveling westbound.

3. Sutter Health-bound traffic routes from Highway 24  

  • From 51st Street and MLK Jr. Way: Traffic turns west at 55th Street, which is already a dangerous intersection, to a route with the following issues:
    • Backup in the left turn lane to 55th during peak traffic hours
    • Speeding on 55th Street and failure to stop at Adeline Street T junction before turning left
    • Traffic hazards and illegal double parking at the CloudKitchens (on Adeline from 54th-53rd Streets), which have been repeatedly reported to the City but not mitigated.
  • From Telegraph Avenue and 56th Street: Traffic turns right on Telegraph right to 55th Street (see 55th-53rd issues above).