MOUNTAIN VIEW — WeWork has agreed to sublease from LinkedIn a huge, yet-to-be-built office complex in Mountain View, in a deal that is also expected to bring a much bigger Amazon presence into Silicon Valley.

Separately, Amazon has also struck a deal to sublease about 165,000 square feet from Ericsson at an office complex in Santa Clara, several sources familiar with that transaction and the digital commerce giant’s expansion plans in Silicon Valley told this news organization in recent weeks. The Amazon sublease in Santa Clara is at 2795 Augustine Drive.

Related Articles Lord & Taylor selling flagship Fifth Avenue store to WeWork “LinkedIn has reassigned its lease at The Village at San Antonio Center, and will not be setting up offices there,” May Chow, a spokeswoman for Mountain View-based LinkedIn, said in emailed comments. “WeWork is taking over the lease.”

The WeWork business model primarily consists of renting large office buildings and then striking deals with corporations that would actually be the principal occupants of the offices.

In this case, Amazon is expected to occupy more than half of the 457,000 square feet of space that WeWork agreed to sublease from LinkedIn, according to multiple people with knowledge of discussions about which companies will ultimately move into the office complex.

That means Amazon potentially could move into at least 228,000 square feet, which could be enough room for 1,100 Amazon workers.

Amazon also previously agreed to occupy two floors of an office tower in downtown San Jose, which WeWork has leased to strike deals with other companies that would move into the high rise.

The Mountain View offices that LinkedIn has relinquished are part of The San Antonio Center village, a big mixed-use project that’s slated to contain offices, a hotel, a movie theater and restaurants. The complex is planned for the corner of San Antonio Road and California Street, near a Caltrain stop.

WeWork said Wednesday it wasn’t able to immediately discuss the situation.

Amazon couldn’t immediately be reached for comment.

The Registry web publication originally reported the news of the transaction, one of the largest rental deals in Silicon Valley during 2017.

The overall development of the San Antonio Center village complex is being led by San Francisco-based realty firm Merlone Geier, which didn’t return phone calls requesting a comment about the situation.

In December 2014, the Mountain View City Council approved a project to redevelop a 9.9-acre site, known as Phase II, at San Antonio Center.

“Phase II includes class A office space, a 167-room business-class hotel, an eight-screen theater, and 80,000 square feet of restaurants and retail,” according to a post on the Merlone Geier Partners website.

The offices, restaurants, retail and movie theater components of the project are under construction, and Mountain View officials deem the village, with its proximity to mass transit, as a crucial piece of the city’s economic mosaic.

“It contains homes, shopping, entertainment, hotels as well as places to work,” said Randy Tsuda, the city’s community development director. “It is a great opportunity to show the community and the region how you can begin to retrofit some of these older shopping centers into a dense mixed-use project.”