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Executive Summary
There are certain locations that quietly gather momentum over time. Highways shift. Populations grow. Freight routes intensify. A small agricultural town becomes a logistical crossroads. Then suddenly a corner that once watched tractors pass by begins to attract something entirely different—truck fleets, commuters, national retailers, and investors looking for the next logical place for growth.
Parcel 4 at Sperry Commercial Park is one of those places.
Situated along the Interstate 5 corridor in Patterson, California, this ±1.00 acre parcel occupies a strategic position within one of the most important transportation routes on the West Coast. To the untrained eye, it is simply a commercial parcel across from a travel center. But to developers, restaurateurs, and retailers who understand the geography of commerce, it represents something far more compelling: a location where multiple economic forces converge every hour of every day.
This is not simply land.
This is movement.
The Geography of Opportunity
Interstate 5 is the spine of California’s inland transportation system. It carries freight from the ports of Southern California northward toward Sacramento, Oregon, and Washington. It moves produce from the Central Valley toward the Bay Area and beyond. It carries commuters from emerging residential communities toward employment centers along the eastern edge of the Bay Area.
And along that corridor sits Patterson.
Historically known for its agricultural roots—once proudly called the Apricot Capital of the World—Patterson has evolved into something new. It is now a gateway community linking the agricultural heartland of California with the distribution and technology economies of the Bay Area. Trucking companies recognize it. Distribution centers recognize it. And increasingly, national retailers are beginning to recognize it as well.
Parcel 4 is positioned precisely where those forces meet.
Directly visible from Love’s Travel Center, one of the most recognizable truck stop brands in the country, the parcel enjoys a constant flow of potential customers. The presence of a major travel center is never accidental. Companies like Love’s analyze traffic counts, freight flows, and long-haul driving patterns with extraordinary precision before committing to a site. Their presence signals that the corridor supports sustained heavy transportation activity.
Where trucks stop, commerce follows.
Fuel stations bring drivers. Drivers bring demand for food, coffee, supplies, and services. Commuters passing the interchange add another layer of daily activity. Local residents from Patterson contribute a third layer. The result is a steady rhythm of movement that continues from early morning through late night.
Parcel 4 sits in the middle of that rhythm.
A One-Acre Canvas for Retail Vision
At approximately one acre, Parcel 4 is a versatile commercial canvas. It is large enough to support a drive-through restaurant or service concept, yet compact enough to allow efficient development and manageable construction costs. In today’s retail landscape—where quick-service restaurants, coffee brands, and convenience concepts thrive on visibility and speed—this parcel offers exactly the right scale.
The potential uses are numerous.
A quick-service restaurant could establish a visible presence along the corridor, serving commuters during the morning rush and truck drivers throughout the day. A coffee concept could capitalize on early morning traffic moving toward the Bay Area. A convenience retailer could serve the constant flow of travelers who exit Interstate 5 seeking a quick stop before continuing north or south.
Each concept shares a common advantage here: consistent traffic flow.
Many retail sites rely on a single customer base. A neighborhood center depends on nearby residents. A freeway stop depends on highway travelers. A downtown location depends on foot traffic from offices.
Parcel 4 benefits from all three.
The Three Economies of the Corridor
The strength of Sperry Commercial Park lies in the convergence of three overlapping economic forces.
Freight logistics traffic along Interstate 5 forms the first. Thousands of trucks move through this corridor daily, carrying goods between distribution centers throughout the Central Valley and ports along the coast. These drivers require fuel, meals, supplies, and rest stops. Every truck that slows near Patterson represents a potential customer.
The second force is the local Patterson community. Over the past two decades the city has experienced steady residential growth as families seek more affordable housing within commuting distance of the Bay Area. New neighborhoods have expanded the local consumer base, bringing demand for restaurants, services, and retail convenience.
The third force is the commuter economy. Patterson has become a starting point for workers traveling toward Livermore, Pleasanton, and Silicon Valley. Each morning vehicles stream westward along regional routes connecting to Interstate 580 and the Bay Area job market. On the return trip each evening, those same commuters bring spending power back through the Interstate 5 corridor.
When these three forces intersect—freight movement, residential growth, and commuter traffic—they create something rare in retail development:
continuous activity throughout the entire day.
Morning coffee traffic.
Midday freight stops.
Evening commuter dining.
Late-night trucking activity.
Parcel 4 stands ready to serve them all.
The Evolution of Sperry Commercial Park
Sperry Commercial Park itself represents the next phase in Patterson’s commercial evolution. As the city grows and regional transportation patterns intensify, strategic commercial nodes begin to emerge along major corridors. Developers recognize these nodes early and begin assembling parcels that will support the services travelers and residents require.
Over time, these nodes transform into fully developed retail environments.
Parcel 4 is part of that transformation.
Infrastructure improvements and roadway access within Sperry Commercial Park provide a framework for development that reduces uncertainty for investors and tenants. The presence of existing commercial activity nearby further reinforces the viability of the location. Each new business strengthens the commercial ecosystem, attracting additional tenants and increasing the visibility of the corridor.
For retailers seeking early positioning in an emerging commercial district, this is precisely the type of environment they seek.
Visibility and Accessibility
Visibility remains one of the most powerful factors in retail success, and Parcel 4 offers it in abundance. Being visible from Love’s Travel Center means the site benefits from the traffic drawn by that facility every day. Drivers entering or exiting the travel center pass directly through the commercial corridor where the parcel sits.
Parcel 4 at Sperry Commercial Park is one of those places.
Situated along the Interstate 5 corridor in Patterson, California, this ±1.00 acre parcel occupies a strategic position within one of the most important transportation routes on the West Coast. To the untrained eye, it is simply a commercial parcel across from a travel center. But to developers, restaurateurs, and retailers who understand the geography of commerce, it represents something far more compelling: a location where multiple economic forces converge every hour of every day.
This is not simply land.
This is movement.
The Geography of Opportunity
Interstate 5 is the spine of California’s inland transportation system. It carries freight from the ports of Southern California northward toward Sacramento, Oregon, and Washington. It moves produce from the Central Valley toward the Bay Area and beyond. It carries commuters from emerging residential communities toward employment centers along the eastern edge of the Bay Area.
And along that corridor sits Patterson.
Historically known for its agricultural roots—once proudly called the Apricot Capital of the World—Patterson has evolved into something new. It is now a gateway community linking the agricultural heartland of California with the distribution and technology economies of the Bay Area. Trucking companies recognize it. Distribution centers recognize it. And increasingly, national retailers are beginning to recognize it as well.
Parcel 4 is positioned precisely where those forces meet.
Directly visible from Love’s Travel Center, one of the most recognizable truck stop brands in the country, the parcel enjoys a constant flow of potential customers. The presence of a major travel center is never accidental. Companies like Love’s analyze traffic counts, freight flows, and long-haul driving patterns with extraordinary precision before committing to a site. Their presence signals that the corridor supports sustained heavy transportation activity.
Where trucks stop, commerce follows.
Fuel stations bring drivers. Drivers bring demand for food, coffee, supplies, and services. Commuters passing the interchange add another layer of daily activity. Local residents from Patterson contribute a third layer. The result is a steady rhythm of movement that continues from early morning through late night.
Parcel 4 sits in the middle of that rhythm.
A One-Acre Canvas for Retail Vision
At approximately one acre, Parcel 4 is a versatile commercial canvas. It is large enough to support a drive-through restaurant or service concept, yet compact enough to allow efficient development and manageable construction costs. In today’s retail landscape—where quick-service restaurants, coffee brands, and convenience concepts thrive on visibility and speed—this parcel offers exactly the right scale.
The potential uses are numerous.
A quick-service restaurant could establish a visible presence along the corridor, serving commuters during the morning rush and truck drivers throughout the day. A coffee concept could capitalize on early morning traffic moving toward the Bay Area. A convenience retailer could serve the constant flow of travelers who exit Interstate 5 seeking a quick stop before continuing north or south.
Each concept shares a common advantage here: consistent traffic flow.
Many retail sites rely on a single customer base. A neighborhood center depends on nearby residents. A freeway stop depends on highway travelers. A downtown location depends on foot traffic from offices.
Parcel 4 benefits from all three.
The Three Economies of the Corridor
The strength of Sperry Commercial Park lies in the convergence of three overlapping economic forces.
Freight logistics traffic along Interstate 5 forms the first. Thousands of trucks move through this corridor daily, carrying goods between distribution centers throughout the Central Valley and ports along the coast. These drivers require fuel, meals, supplies, and rest stops. Every truck that slows near Patterson represents a potential customer.
The second force is the local Patterson community. Over the past two decades the city has experienced steady residential growth as families seek more affordable housing within commuting distance of the Bay Area. New neighborhoods have expanded the local consumer base, bringing demand for restaurants, services, and retail convenience.
The third force is the commuter economy. Patterson has become a starting point for workers traveling toward Livermore, Pleasanton, and Silicon Valley. Each morning vehicles stream westward along regional routes connecting to Interstate 580 and the Bay Area job market. On the return trip each evening, those same commuters bring spending power back through the Interstate 5 corridor.
When these three forces intersect—freight movement, residential growth, and commuter traffic—they create something rare in retail development:
continuous activity throughout the entire day.
Morning coffee traffic.
Midday freight stops.
Evening commuter dining.
Late-night trucking activity.
Parcel 4 stands ready to serve them all.
The Evolution of Sperry Commercial Park
Sperry Commercial Park itself represents the next phase in Patterson’s commercial evolution. As the city grows and regional transportation patterns intensify, strategic commercial nodes begin to emerge along major corridors. Developers recognize these nodes early and begin assembling parcels that will support the services travelers and residents require.
Over time, these nodes transform into fully developed retail environments.
Parcel 4 is part of that transformation.
Infrastructure improvements and roadway access within Sperry Commercial Park provide a framework for development that reduces uncertainty for investors and tenants. The presence of existing commercial activity nearby further reinforces the viability of the location. Each new business strengthens the commercial ecosystem, attracting additional tenants and increasing the visibility of the corridor.
For retailers seeking early positioning in an emerging commercial district, this is precisely the type of environment they seek.
Visibility and Accessibility
Visibility remains one of the most powerful factors in retail success, and Parcel 4 offers it in abundance. Being visible from Love’s Travel Center means the site benefits from the traffic drawn by that facility every day. Drivers entering or exiting the travel center pass directly through the commercial corridor where the parcel sits.
Property Facts
| Sale Type | Investment | Property Subtype | Commercial |
| Sale Condition | 1031 Exchange | Proposed Use | Commercial |
| No. Lots | 1 | Total Lot Size | 1.00 AC |
| Property Type | Land | ||
| Zoning | General Commercial - General Commercial | ||
| Sale Type | Investment |
| Sale Condition | 1031 Exchange |
| No. Lots | 1 |
| Property Type | Land |
| Property Subtype | Commercial |
| Proposed Use | Commercial |
| Total Lot Size | 1.00 AC |
| Zoning | General Commercial - General Commercial |
1 Lot Available
Lot 4
| Lot Size | 1.00 AC |
| Lot Size | 1.00 AC |
±1.00 acre commercial parcel at Sperry Commercial Park in Patterson, CA near Interstate 5. Visible from Love’s Travel Center. Ideal for QSR, drive-thru, coffee, or service retail with strong commuter and truck traffic.
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2900 Sperry Ave - Sperry Commercial Park Parcel 4
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