Pittsburgh retail can be summed up in three words: location, location, location — and the original definition of great real estate has never been more pronounced than it is today in the Pittsburgh retail market. According to some publications, retail and retailers appear to be struggling almost everywhere for many different reasons, including online sales, too many stores, market conditions and oversaturation of product. However, as of year-end 2016, CoStar indicated that the overall Pittsburgh retail market occupancy rate was 96.8 percent. Pittsburgh has natural barriers to entry for retail due to its topography, which includes numerous hills and valleys, making it often times impossible to build a “newer, bigger, better” retail property across the street. As a result, many developers have successfully repurposed older centers through adaptive reuse, converting them in keeping with the latest and greatest retail trends. Other older centers have successfully withstood the test of time, replacing outdated retail concepts with today’s current concepts at significantly lower costs than building a new center. Adaptive reuse of Pittsburgh retail started decades ago when the May Company relocated Kaufmann’s Department Stores from four freestanding locations into the dominant regional malls, leaving one- and two-story 200,000-square-foot boxes vacant. Local …
Pennsylvania
WARMINSTER, PA. — J.G. Petrucci Co. has developed Jacksonville Station, a 151-unit apartment community located at 375 Jacksonville Road in Warminster. The property features 74 one-bedroom and 77 two-bedroom apartment units with modern amenities, including stainless steel kitchen appliances, quartz countertops and full-size washer/dryers in each unit. Situated on 10 acres, the community features on-site surface parking, a fitness center, a swimming pool and a clubhouse. Minno & Wasko designed the property.
Cushman & Wakefield Arranges Sale of 270,168 SF Industrial Park in Central Pennsylvania
by Amy Works
LEWISBERRY, PA. — Cushman & Wakefield has brokered the sale of Fairview Industrial Park, a six-building industrial park located in Lewisberry. Richmond, Va.-based Allegiancy sold the 270,168-square-foot park to Louisville, Colo.-based Real Capital Partners for $11.7 million. The buildings are located at 509, 515 and 540 Industrial Drive and 621, 629 and 631 Distribution Plaza. Gerry Blinebury, Robert Yoshimura, Joseph Hill Jr. and Pat McBride of Cushman & Wakefield represented the seller in the deal.
EXTON, PA. — A joint venture between Pembroke IV and Ten Capital Management has acquired Valley Creek Corporate Center, an office complex located in Exton. A California-based real estate investment management and advisory company sold the three-building asset for $45.3 million. Located at 220, 222 and 224 Valley Creek Blvd., the 259,163-square-foot property was 95.2 percent leased at the time of sale. Doug Rodio, Brett Segal, Ben Appel and Jose Cruz of HFF represented the seller in the deal. Additionally, Ryan Ade and Neil Campbell of HFF secured a 10-year, fixed-rate acquisition loan through Barclays Capital for the buyer.
YARDLEY, PA. — A fund advised by Inland Institutional Capital has acquired Lower Makefield Shopping Center in Yardley. The 74,953-square-foot grocery- and drugstore-anchored property sold for an undisclosed price. The name of the seller was not released. Giant grocery store and Rite Aid Pharmacy occupy the property.
CHADDS FORD, PA. — Talonvest Capital has arranged $24.1 million in construction financing for Metro Self Storage. The borrower plans to develop one self-storage facility in Chadds Ford and two in Naperville and Addison, Illinois. In total, the new developments will feature more than 236,000 rentable square feet. A Midwestern-based bank financed the Pennsylvania development, while an East Coast-based bank funded the two suburban Chicago properties. Kim Leslie, Tom Sherlock and Jim Davies of Talonvest negotiated and structured the loans for the borrower.
PHILADELPHIA — Colliers International has arranged a $4.1 million in refinancing for a mixed-use property located at 2231 Bryn Mawr Ave. in Philadelphia. The building features 12 apartments and 13,000 square feet of commercial space. The loan features a five-year fixed rate with a five-year reset. Kris Wood, John Banas, Chad Levitt, Tim Hoyt, Martin Duval and Jordan Canino of Colliers International secured the financing for the undisclosed borrower.
ERIE, PA. — The Woda Group Inc. is developing Willow Commons, a $9.5 million seniors housing property located at 2064 Willow St. in Erie. A combination of new construction and the adaptive reuse of The Wesleyville Public School, Willow Commons will feature 29 one-bedroom and 16 two-bedroom affordable apartments for seniors age 62 or older, with income levels below 60 percent of area median income. Slated for completion this fall, the property will feature a community room with kitchen, common laundry, a library/craft room, an exercise room, an outdoor space with a community garden and seating area.
The Urban Land Institute (ULI) listed Pittsburgh among its top five markets to watch in the 2017 Emerging Trends in Real Estate report due to its low cost to do business; access to talent via four major universities; and its status as an emerging tech hub with the likes of Uber, Google, Facebook and most recently, Amazon, establishing regional research and development centers in the city. Citizens Bank announced that it would remain a tenant in 525 William Penn Place, where it occupies approximately 150,000 square feet, reporting that its management views Pittsburgh as a growth driver for the company. Ford Motor Company inked a $1 billion deal with Argo AI, a Pittsburgh start-up that focuses on artificial intelligence and robotics, to expand its research and development of self-driving cars. Ford now is surveying the Greater Downtown submarket for space to construct a 100,000-square-foot facility to hold the 200 employees it expects to hire over the next 24 months. Despite the region’s growing popularity as a tech hub, leasing activity in first quarter 2017 reported a 23.3 percent drop from the same period 2016, ending the quarter at just less than 600,000 square feet, while overall net absorption dropped an …
FREDERICKSBURG, PA. — Ace Hardware has signed a long-term lease for 1.1 million square feet of distribution space at Lebanon Valley Distribution Center, located at 139 Fredericksburg Road in Fredericksburg. The lease involves a 1.1 million-square-foot cross-docked, 36-foot clear height distribution facility. The existing 874,126-square-foot facility will be expanded by 225,875 square feet and delivered to Ace Hardware for occupancy by year’s end. Joseph McDermott, Jake Terkanian, Vincent Ranalli and David Lind of CBRE represented Ace Hardware. The property is owned by USAA Real Estate Co. and is being developed by Trammell Crow Co.