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High-profile projects in Houston’s Inner Loop are aiming to change the perception of the city’s epic sprawl, the people behind some of Houston’s hottest projects told attendees at Bisnow’s HTX Major Projects event.

“We’re thinking many decades in the future,” McCord Development President Ryan McCord said. “We’re trying to put our finger on why Houston is a lifestyle city. We have no mountains, no beaches. What’s Houston’s intangible? Access to opportunity. There’s something unique and cool about Houston, it’s a little gritty.”
McCord, whose Generation Park master-planned development spans roughly 5,600 acres, has been a passionate advocate for the Bayou City, pitching directly to Jeff Bezos during Amazon’s HQ2 search. “One of the central things about Houston that gets me comfortable is the prospect for growth,” McCord said.

Time will tell if Houston’s perception is really changing. America’s fourth-largest city has changed significantly in just a few years. With pockets of dense infill development, the next step will be connecting them all together, stitching an urban landscape that brings Houston’s diversity together. “The big issue to me is connectivity,” Schultz said. “The city is what it is. It’s vast and getting bigger. We’re not going to change that, so we need to find ways to take advantage of other transportation methods.”


Houston SkylineWhen the opportunity zone program was announced in late 2017, Dosch Marshall Real Estate Vice President Tripp Rich received a lot of calls about the program, including from firms he was not familiar with. The initial prospect of the tax exemption was so attractive and unheard of that everyone wanted in. Houston showed particular promise: The MSA has the highest concentration of assets in opportunity zones — 21.7% compared to the national average at 12.6%, according to the commercial real estate data platform Reonomy. “Houston should attract more opportunity zone projects than any other city,” Reonomy Vice President of Marketing Sam Viskovich said.  But investment interest in the program has dwindled, and Rich said the number of firms talking to him about participating has dropped. Bisnow Archives/Kyle Hagerty Houston skyline Qualified opportunity funds have raised less than 10 cents on the dollar of the program’s targeted goal in 2019, according to CoStar. In Houston, the percentage of total commercial investment within opportunity zones has dropped from 38.5% in 2017, which is the highest in a nearly 20-year span, to 16.4% for the first quarter of 2019, according to a report by Reonomy.  There are at least three possible reasons for the slowdown, Viskovich said. It could be related to the number of sites in high-targeted areas. Since the program used 2010 census data and input from local leaders, some zones were already experiencing an influx of capital. He also noted the maturing cycle could have some investors tightening the purse strings and focusing on the tried-and-true deals. But some of the drops may just be that deals haven’t happened yet, not that they won’t happen at all. The initial obscurity of the program caused some to take a wait-and-see approach. Viskovich expects those who are satisfied with the new guidance (released by the IRS in April) will move forward with their projects.  Courtesy of Reonomy Reonomy Vice President of Marketing Sam Viskovich The pace of investment activity for the rest of the year will be a good indicator of the future traction of the opportunity zone program, Viskovich said.  Rich expects a big rush to close on sites closer to 2020. Opportunity zone projects follow the traditional development timeline and process — the deals take time. It could take up to 12 months after the site is under contract to break ground. And until dirt turns, developers are keeping quiet about their plans. “No one wants to talk about a project until they know it is about to happen,” he said. The rise in pricing in opportunity zones is one reason to stay optimistic about the program’s future in Houston. Since the announcement of the OZ program, the average sales price for properties in Houston opportunities zones has increased significantly compared to properties, not in opportunity zones, which have remained steady. Multifamily development has been the go-to property type for opportunity zone investment in Houston, said JLL Senior Vice President Jonathan Paine, whose team arranged construction financing and equity for Hines’ The Preston, a 373-unit luxury apartment project funded by Cresset-Diversified QOZ Fund in Downtown Houston. He is engaged with more than 10 opportunity zone projects across the country, made up mostly of multifamily developments. A local developer is planning two apartment complexes in the Inner Loop, Rich said.  A national QOZ fund plans to spend upwards of $350M in Texas, Arizona, Colorado, Kansas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, and Utah, according to Rich. The fund is targeting mostly multifamily development, while office and mixed-use projects are also being considered. Courtesy of Dosch Marshall Real Estate Dosch Marshall Real Estate Vice President Tripp Rich Developers are opting for apartments and hotels because they can be built quicker; the quality can be sustained over a long period; there is no pre-leasing required for financing; and, unlike office development, they are not dependent on long-term leases, Paine said. He expects retail development to come in the next phase of investment as zones become more densified. Industrial development is also feasible; he is in talks with a fund to develop an industrial building in an opportunity zone out of state.  More than a fourth of the properties in Houston’s opportunity zones are categorized as commercial general and about 25% is multifamily, according to Reonomy. Retail and industrial come in as third and fourth in the share of assets in opportunity zones.   Zones in Houston’s Inner Loop, which includes already-revitalizing areas such as downtown, are expected to benefit the most under the opportunity zone program, Rich said.  That is partial because all opportunity zone projects must pencil out. While the federal program was designed to stimulate commercial expansion in economically distressed areas by providing a tax benefit in exchange for a long-term investment, being in an opportunity alone doesn’t make a project a safe bet.  Bisnow/Catie Dixon Hanover Co.’s Brandt Bowden, JLL’s Jonathan Paine and Weingarten CEO Drew Alexander at Bisnow Houston’s capital markets event February 2016 Investors and developers have become more mindful when selecting partners, as funds must hold properties at least 10 years to maximize the tax benefits of the program, Paine said. These projects will require a long-term commitment from both sides.  Developers want to pick the fund early in the development process before designing and permitting the project, which helps to share the cost and provide input on the scope and viability of the project, Paine said. For example, one opportunity zone partnership in Las Vegas is considering how the next owner will perceive the quality of the product, Paine said. They opted for higher-quality materials and exterior cladding that will provide durability and functionality in the long run. While the upgrades ultimately add 10% to 15% more to the budget, the idea is that the property will retain its value.  “They were in agreement that was the best thing for a project that they were going to own for 10 years,” he said.  While the number of investors eyeing Houston opportunity zone deals has shrunk, that isn’t necessarily concerning. Since the Treasury Department released the second round of guidance in April, sophisticated funds are moving forward with development plans while the delays and intricacies of the process have weeded out less experienced real estate investors. The QOFs interested in building in Houston come from the same group of investors that have considered Houston in prior investment periods, Paine said. The most active groups are ready to deploy capital with the staff and the knowledge to meet and maintain the regulations set by the federal government.


JLL To Buy Peloton Commercial Real Estate

JLL To Buy Peloton Commercial Real Estate Dallas-Ft. Worth September 19, 2019, Kerri Panchuk, Bisnow Dallas-Fort Worth Want to get a jump-start on upcoming deals? Meet the major Dallas-Fort Worth players at one of our upcoming events! Commercial real estate giant JLL announced plans to purchase Peloton Commercial Real Estate Thursday. The merger will effectively pull Peloton’s Dallas and Houston offices into JLL’s agency leasing and property management business lines.  Ricky Bautista, Unsplash Downtown Dallas As part of the merger, more than 130 Peloton employees will be joining JLL. The acquisition is expected to close in the next few weeks, with Peloton co-founding partners Joel Pustmueller and T.D. Briggs and JLL’s Jeff Eckert leading the statewide integration efforts.  Pustmueller and Briggs will work directly with the Dallas-Fort Worth and Houston offices while Eckert will oversee Austin, San Antonio, and Dallas-Fort Worth as the teams integrate.  Peloton Property Management partner John Myers will be named the regional leader of property management for DFW. “This is a momentous step in our journey to become a market-leading player in Texas,” said David Carroll, JLL market director for the South Central Region. “With the exceptional growth we have seen in those markets, Peloton’s position as a leading provider of leasing and property management services will greatly enhance our business capabilities and breadth of services. Just as importantly, we look forward to working with a team of professionals that share JLL’s strong commitment to collaboration and culture.” JLL has a long history of growing via mergers and acquisitions, including closing the $2B acquisition of HFF July 1. One of its most notable acquisitions in Texas was bringing The Staubach Co., led by Dallas Cowboys elite quarterback Roger Staubach, into its fold in 2008.


 

investors spent $3.8 billion on investment properties in the Houston area in the third quarter, a sharp decline from the same period a year earlier. The decline in the overall value of transactions, down 47 percent from the year-earlier, fell across most property categories, according to Real Capital Analytics, a research firm that tracks commercial property transactions.

*       Office: Local third-quarter investments totaled $500 million, down 56 percent from the year-ago period.
*       Hospitality: Local hotel investments were an exception, totaling $200 million in the quarter, nearly double the amount from the third quarter of 2018.
*       Multi-Family: The value of apartment deals transacted in the quarter fell by 40 percent year over year to $1.5 billion in the Houston region in the third quarter. Even with the decline, multifamily properties were still the top choice of investors, making up nearly 40 percent of the local sales activity.
*       Industrial: Locally, sales of Houston area industrial properties totaled $900 million in the third quarter, down 13 percent from a year earlier.
*       Retail: The value of year-over-year sales of local retail properties dropped by 85 percent to $300 million.

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Demand for industrial property continues to outstrip developers’ capacity to deliver new space, according to Transwestern’s latest national report on the sector. Occupiers soaked up a net 41.2 million square feet in the third quarter of 2019,
a 23% decrease from 53.2 million square feet absorbed in the previous quarter and less than half the pace in third quarter 2018.

Meanwhile, the national vacancy rate ticked up for a third consecutive quarter to reach 5.0%. New industrial projects are leasing quickly and often before construction is complete, with vacancy concentrated in older properties.

“Much of the older-generation industrial space vacated as users have upgraded to newly constructed properties remains unleased,” said Matt Dolly, Research Director in New Jersey. “While that results in what appears to be increased availability at the national level, the scarcity of functional space in prime locations is slowing absorption. Users are committing to lease newer, more efficient properties even before construction has started rather than take an aging alternative in a less desirable location.”

Developers are racing to answer unmet demand and had 427.5 million square feet of construction underway at the end of the quarter. That’s up from 407 million square feet in the second quarter, also a record. The volume of new product entering the market helped raise average asking rent to $6.42 per square foot.

“E-commerce and logistics operations are typically less sensitive to rent than to transportation costs,” Dolly said. “These occupiers are more likely to consider locations that shorten last-mile deliveries and reduce overall operating cost.”

In some built-out markets such as Southern California, developers must vie for sites to introduce new supply, often by acquiring and redeveloping existing structures. Of the 47 industrial markets tracked by Transwestern, the region posted the three lowest vacancy rates in the third quarter with Los Angeles at 1.2%, Orange County at 2.4% and the Inland Empire at 2.8%.

Michael Soto, Research Manager in Southern California, says uncertainty stemming from the ongoing U.S.-China trade war hasn’t dampened that market’s occupier or investor demand for industrial real estate.

“Strong industrial real estate fundamentals in the Greater Los Angeles metro continue to create the most supply-constrained conditions in the country,” Soto said. “Investors have responded with nearly double-digit, year-over-year rental rate growth, record-high pricing, and record-low average cap rates.

Other markets with vacancy below 4% include Detroit (3.3%); Long Island, New York (3.2%); Minneapolis (3.2%); Nashville, Tennessee (3.6%); New Jersey (3.5%); and Raleigh/Durham, North Carolina (3.7%).

Healthy consumer spending continues to support industrial demand and is expected to strengthen in the holiday season, though at a slower rate than in 2018. Transportation and warehousing employment continued to expand in the third quarter, while business confidence slipped, especially in manufacturing.

 


The Bank of America Tower has sold for $542 million, according to a report in Real Estate Alert, a newsletter for institutional investors. At $695 a square foot, the deal would mark a record per-foot price for Houston, easily beating the previous record of $528 a square foot. The news shows that there’s a market for new, high-end office space even as Houston’s office market overall suffers from high vacancy rates.

The newsletter reported that the buyer was California teachers’ pension fund manager CalSTRS.

The 35-story tower at 800 Capitol opened this summer with 88 percent of its office space pre-leased. Originally called Capitol Tower, the 754,000-square-foot building was renamed the Bank of America Tower after the bank decided to consolidate its three downtown offices to 210,000 square feet in the project. Other tenants include Waste Management, Winston & Strawn and Quantum Energy Partners.

A lushly landscaped 24,000-square-foot “sky park,” a 35,000-square-foot community hub and culinary market and 10,000-square-foot conference and events center are among the amenities meant to attract tenants to space. According to the tower’s developer, Skanska, the LEED-certified tower uses 32 percent less energy than the typical office tower.

According to commercial real estate firm CBRE, 19.3 percent of Houston’s office space was vacant in the third quarter, and the average annual asking rate was $28.78 per square foot.


Allen is the fourth development between DC Partners and GT Leach, and second with Thompson Hotels.

HOUSTON—The Residences at The Allen and Lifestyle Pavilion, a multi-use development, recently broke ground, and will include the luxury brand Thompson Hotel, according to DC Partners. In addition, space will include a fitness club, two restaurants, retail spaces, and an office building.

Situated across six acres at the southeast corner of Allen Parkway and Gillette Street, the development overlooking Buffalo Bayou Park will serve as a crossroads between downtown and the Galleria/Uptown area, and Midtown and the Texas Medical Center.

The groundbreaking “is a significant milestone for The Allen,” said Roberto Contreras, CEO of DC Partners, the developer of The Allen. “I am very proud of the dream team we have put together for this project. This is the fourth development for DC Partners with general contractor GT Leach and our second project with Thompson Hotels. Our goal is to change the way Houstonians think about high-rise living and deliver a lifestyle that is representative of luxury hotel living without sacrificing all the privacy of your own home.”

The DC Partners team was joined at the recent groundbreaking by Tianqing Real Estate Development, Westmont Hospitality Group, HOK, Abel Design Group, and GT Leach.

“We’re thrilled to be introducing the Thompson Hotels brand to Houston in our second collaboration with DC Partners in the state of Texas, as part of this landmark mixed-use development,” said Catie Mangels, vice president of residential, lifestyle development and owner relations for Hyatt. “The innovative vision and pioneering spirit behind The Allen are well aligned with the Thompson brand’s legacy as a disruptor in the luxury lifestyle hotel segment.”

The Residences at The Allen will offer services and full amenities provided by the Thompson Hotel, including 24-hour concierge and room service, spa, city views, and a pool deck with cabanas and restaurants. A helistop will be available to hotel guests and residents and is engineered to accommodate drone deliveries and transportation of the future.

“The Allen will be the first new construction development in Houston to have this amenity,” Contreras tells GlobeSt.com. “One of our goals for this project was to incorporate innovative amenities and technologies, as well as thinking about how people will live in the future. This includes drone deliveries as the industry continues to evolve, as well as the future of drones that will transport people. Additionally, the helistop will allow for quick trips to surrounding  airports and provide life safety services to the nearby Houston Medical Center.”

The Lifestyle Pavilion will feature 52,000 square feet of retail and restaurant space and is currently 80% leased. Residents and hotel guests will enjoy an endless backyard as it serves as an extension of the outdoor active lifestyle of Buffalo Bayou Park.

The Residences at The Allen are currently 15% sold. The 99 units will consist of one-bedroom, two-bedroom, and three-bedroom condos, as well as 17 penthouses ranging from 919 to 10,000 square feet. Expected delivery of the Lifestyle Pavilion is fourth quarter 2020, with the grand opening during the first quarter of 2021. The hotel-condo tower will be completed in 2023.

The Allen is developed by DC Partners with investment from Tianqing Real Estate Development and Westmont Hospitality Group. The site plan and architecture were led by HOK, and interiors for the hotel and residences were provided by Abel Design Group. Houston-based GT Leach will serve as a general contractor for the hotel, condo and lifestyle pavilion development.

Rents set a record high at $1.18 per square foot, with multifamily occupancy at its highest since the energy downturn, according to a third-quarter report by CBRE. Year-to-date net absorption reached 12,989 units as of the end of the quarter.

Job grew at 2.7%, adding 81,900 jobs. Among these, 22,800 were in professional and business services say CBRE.


First Look At Midtown Ion Innovation Hub's Plan For Surrounding Area Revealed

The public finally has a sense of the scope of Rice University’s proposed redevelopment of the former Midtown Sears. Dubbed The Ion Innovation Hub, the project looks to be a game-changer for the surrounding area. In a variance request first reported by the Houston Chronicle, plans show 13 proposed structures with green space connecting them.  Work on the Midtown Sears and an accompanying parking garage are well underway and renderings of a finished project have been officially released. Plans for the surrounding area, owned mostly by Rice University, have been vague but ambitious. The documents filed by consulting firm Vernon G. Henry & Associates on behalf of Rice are the first look at plans for the area, which appears to include extensive landscaping.
The Ion Innovation Hub Proposed Site Plan

The plans indicate Phase 1 will focus on the three parcels adjacent to the north, east and northeast of the Midtown Sears site, where three buildings totaling roughly 102K SF and a 22.5K SF civic plaza will be developed. Plans for the rest of the project will come in future phases.


Stockdale Capital Partners has acquired a 433,132-square-foot creative office building in Houston’s Greenway submarket. Principal Real Estate Investors sold the Class A property, while Cigna Realty Investors facilitated the transaction with a seven-year, fixed-rate acquisition loan.

Located at 20 Greenway Plaza, the ten-story asset is within walking distance of several dining and retail options, as well as residential properties. The location provides easy access to Houston’s major thoroughfares and public transit. Originally built as a retail property in 1984, the tower was converted for office use in 2002, according to Yardi Matrix information. Most recently, the building underwent upgrades in 2014.

Also known as the Koch Building, 20 Greenway Plaza was 95 percent occupied at the time of sale. Its tenant roster includes notable companies such as Merrill Lynch, Mitsubishi, Sunnova Energy Corp., REALEC Technologies and Koch.

Principal Real Estate worked with HFF Senior Managing Director Dan Miller and Managing Director Trent Agnew, while the brokerage company’s debt placement team led by Managing Director Trent Agnew arranged the financing on behalf of the buyer. Recently, Miller was part of the team handling the sale of One Sugar Creek Center, a 193,998-square-foot office building in Sugar Land, Texas.


JLL announced today that it has closed the sale of The Mix @ Midtown, a 73,000-square-foot, fully leased Class A retail property that is housed on an entire city block in Houston’s Midtown neighborhood.

JLL marketed the property on behalf of the seller, Crosspoint Properties, who developed the property in 2008. The fifth Corner, in a joint venture with Pointer Real Estate Partners, purchased the asset.

The Mix @ Midtown anchors Houston’s Midtown neighborhood, a highly walkable neighborhood and Houston’s primary 24/7 district near downtown and the Texas Medical Center. The property pioneered the first mixed-use asset in the area. It is fully leased to a best-in-class roster of experiential retailers, including 24 Hour Fitness, Jinya Raman Bar, Artisans Restaurant, Gen Korean BBQ, Piola, Kung Fu Tea, and Cloud 10 Creamery. Situated on 1.43 acres at 3201 Louisiana Street, The Mix @ Midtown spans an entire city block in Houston’s Midtown neighborhood and includes a 296-space parking garage, a unique feature in MIdtown. The property is located at the hard corner of Louisiana and Elgin, which is Midtown’s busiest intersection with approximately 45,000 vehicles passing through daily.

Midtown is sandwiched between the two largest employment centers in Houston, including downtown (300,000 daytime population) and The Texas Medical Center (107,000 daytime population). The demographics in Midtown and around The Mix are staggering, with 188,000 residents with an average annual household income of $127,000 and a daytime population exceeding 400,000 workers within a three-mile radius. The area benefits from access to the METRORail Red Line, which, as one of the nation’s most traveled metro lines based on boardings per track mile, connects downtown Houston to the Texas Medical Center and passes right through Midtown just two blocks from The Mix. Additionally, Midtown is highly walkable, evidenced by a Walk Score of 86, and is flush with parks, art galleries, restaurants, and nightlife. Several major developments are underway in Midtown highlighted by Morgan Group’s Whole Foods-anchored residential building (one block away) and Rice University’s Ion innovation district. Phase I of the Ion will be a $100 million renovation of a 270,000-square-foot Sears, which will serve as a gathering place for startups, large corporations seeking new technologies, venture capitalists, business accelerator and academics.

The JLL Capital Markets team representing the seller was led by Senior Managing Director Rusty Tamlyn, Directors John Indelli and Michael Johnson and Analyst Bryan Strode.

“Packed with high-rise apartments, big incomes, walkability, public transportation, daytime population and greenspace, all the ingredients are in-place for Midtown, which has evolved into one of Houston’s top retail, office, and living destinations,” Indelli said.

JLL Capital Markets is a full-service global provider of capital solutions for real estate investors and occupiers. The firm’s in-depth local market and global investor knowledge deliver the best-in-class solutions for clients — whether investment advisory, debt placement, equity placement or a recapitalization. The firm has more than 3,700 Capital Markets specialists worldwide with offices in nearly 50 countries.

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