Schools

SRVUSD Approves Plan To Move Headquarters From Danville To San Ramon Through $18M Purchase

The office building on Crow Canyon Place will have tenants who will generate rent revenue for the district.

SRVUSD will take up roughly one third of the building, and the other tenants are expected to generate roughly $1.3 million annually in unrestricted funds.
SRVUSD will take up roughly one third of the building, and the other tenants are expected to generate roughly $1.3 million annually in unrestricted funds. (Google Maps)

SAN RAMON, CA — The San Ramon Valley Unified School District Board approved a decision to purchase an $18 million office building at 3130 Crow Canyon Place in San Ramon, which will serve as the district’s new headquarters. SRVUSD administration will take up one third of the building, and the existing commercial tenants currently occupying two-thirds of the building are estimated to generate approximately $1.3 million annually for the district’s general fund. The funds would be unrestricted, meaning they could be used for any purposes the district deems fit.

The district is using restricted Redevelopment Agency funds to finance the $18 million purchase of the building, meaning that the general fund or bond funds for school site facility improvements will be untouched.

“This strategic move is a major step toward long-term financial stability and operational efficiency for our entire District,” SRVUSD Superintendent CJ Cammack said in a statement. “This is not just a good three-year decision; it is a good 30-year decision. We are turning a static asset and a restricted funding source into a dynamic and sustainable financial engine for the future of our students.”

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The district also said that the new office building will help alleviate overcrowding at its current offices at 699 Old Orchard Drive in Danville. The town of Danville’s Housing Element has already identified the old site as a potential site for future home development.

The deal to buy the Crow Canyon Place property is expected to complete in the next few months, and new revenue could arrive as early as spring 2026, the district said.

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Despite the new revenue, the district is still contending with major budget shortages. In 2025, the SRVUSD board approved $26 million in cuts, leading to demonstrations from the San Ramon Valley Education Association and prolonged negotiations. In April, Contra Costa County downgraded the SRVUSD’s status from “positive” to “qualified,” according to reporting from Danville San Ramon.


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