Palo Alto group buys 2,284 acres at Sargent Ranch, ending 10-year battle Today Us News


An environmental group has purchased nearly all of the remaining land at Sargent Ranch, a vast property south of Gilroy along Highway 101 where Southern California investors sparked a 10-year controversy after proposing to build a sand-and-gravel quarry.

Under the agreement, the Palo Alto-based non-profit Peninsula Open Space Trust will pay $23.04 million to Sargent Ranch Partners LLC, a San Diego development group, to purchase 2,284 acres of the bucolic ranch, one of the largest remaining pieces of undeveloped private property in Santa Clara County and home to mountain lions, bald eagles and steelhead trout.

“It’s classic California,” said Gordon Clark, president of the Peninsula Open Space Trust. “Beautiful rolling hills, iconic oaks, creeks, wetlands and dramatic vistas. A stunning landscape that feels like you are stepping back in time. It’s very gratifying. This has been a goal that so many people have shared for so long.”

Peninsula Open Space Trust President Gordon Clark shows a part of Sargent Ranch, south of Gilroy, during a tour on Jan. 16, 2026. The Peninsula Open Space Trust, a Palo Alto environmental group, has purchased 6,114 acres of the historic ranch for $63.7 million in one of the largest land conservation deals in Santa Clara County history. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)
Peninsula Open Space Trust President Gordon Clark shows a part of Sargent Ranch, south of Gilroy, during a tour on Jan. 16, 2026. The Peninsula Open Space Trust, a Palo Alto environmental group, has purchased 6,114 acres of the historic ranch for $63.7 million in one of the largest land conservation deals in Santa Clara County history. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) 

The deal, which closed Wednesday, kills plans for the quarry, a proposed 403-acre open-pit mine.

That project, which the investors first proposed in 2015, has been opposed by environmental groups, multiple city councils, including in Santa Clara, Mountain View and Sunnyvale, and the Amah Mutsun Tribal Band, which previously inhabited the area for thousands of years.

“I’m so elated,” said Ed Ketchum, chairman of the Amah Mutsun, a group of roughly 600 people who trace their ancestry back to Ohlone villages in the area they call “Juristac.” “From when I was a child, the elders would always say this is a special place that needs to be protected. It was meant not to be developed.”

Peninsula Open Space Trust President Gordon Clark, left, and Amah Mutsun Tribal Band Chair Ed Ketchum, show a part of Sargent Ranch, south of Gilroy, during a tour on Jan. 16, 2026. The Peninsula Open Space Trust, a Palo Alto environmental group, has purchased 6,114 acres of the historic ranch for $63.7 million in one of the largest land conservation deals in Santa Clara County history. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)
Peninsula Open Space Trust President Gordon Clark, left, and Amah Mutsun Tribal Band Chair Ed Ketchum, show a part of Sargent Ranch, south of Gilroy, during a tour on Jan. 16, 2026. The Peninsula Open Space Trust, a Palo Alto environmental group, has purchased 6,114 acres of the historic ranch for $63.7 million in one of the largest land conservation deals in Santa Clara County history. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) 

Howard Justus, a San Diego businessman who leads the investor group that previously owned the property, said he would have no comment on the sale. In the past, he has said the quarry would have been located on just a small portion of the ranch and that its sand and gravel would have been important to Bay Area building projects.

This week’s sale is the third major piece of Sargent Ranch that the land trust has bought from Justus and his partners, culminating in one of the most significant land preservation deals in the Bay Area in recent years.

Last year and in 2024, the trust, known as “POST,” spent an additional $40.7 million to buy two other portions of the property totaling 3,830 acres. The latest purchase gives the trust ownership of 93% of the 6,594-acre ranch — an area six times the size of San Francisco’s Golden Gate Park.

The land trust has signed an option with the investor group to buy the remaining 480 acres. That area contains 15 active oil wells — the only ones in Santa Clara County. They must be capped and the equipment  removed before the sale is complete, Clark said. That is expected to happen by the end of this year, he added. Part of the ranch has natural tar seeps, and oil drilling there dates back to the 1870s.

An oil pumpjack is seen at Sargent Ranch, south of Gilroy, on Jan. 16, 2026. The Peninsula Open Space Trust, a Palo Alto environmental group, has purchased 6,114 acres of the historic ranch for $63.7 million in one of the largest land conservation deals in Santa Clara County history. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group)
An oil pumpjack is seen at Sargent Ranch, south of Gilroy, on Jan. 16, 2026. The Peninsula Open Space Trust, a Palo Alto environmental group, has purchased 6,114 acres of the historic ranch for $63.7 million in one of the largest land conservation deals in Santa Clara County history. (Dai Sugano/Bay Area News Group) 

What will ultimately happen to the entire property, including whether there will be public access, remains unclear.

Clark said that in the next few years, his organization, which is funded largely by private donations from foundations and Silicon Valley contributors, will conduct studies of the wildlife and the landscape. Sargent Ranch is home to badgers, deer, hawks and other animals, serving as a key wildlife corridor between the Santa Cruz Mountains and the Diablo and Gabilan mountain ranges. On a visit earlier this month, a bald eagle was visible on the property.


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