New Mexico

Southern New Mexico's industrial market, particularly Dona Ana County, has remained stable through 2013. We project solid growth in this arena for 2014. A majority of the growth will be in the Santa Teresa area where Union Pacific is in the middle of a massive investment that will create the largest intermodal inland port in the United States. This project has already brought jobs and more than $40 million to New Mexico contractors so far. It is expected to create more than 600 permanent jobs in mechanical, electrical, architectural, utilities, track and civil engineering. Santa Teresa’s intermodal station has started to generate significant conversations with major companies for distribution and warehouse properties. Growth in Santa Teresa is further fueled by the proximity to the Mexican border where many of these same companies operate maquiladora plants on the Mexican side. We continue to struggle to meet demands for large-box users in Santa Teresa due to the limited availability of space in the area. This problem is compounded by the tight lending market, where little equity is available to developers looking to bring new speculative space on line. Additionally, many of the users looking in the Santa Teresa area typically do not …

FacebookTwitterLinkedinEmail

The southern New Mexico industrial sector remained strong in 2011 and we expect 2012 to be a year of continued expansion and growth. The largest concentration of growth in the industrial arena has taken place in Santa Teresa and the immediate surrounding area. The industrial market in this trade area has benefited greatly from its proximity to the border with Mexico and work done by Gov. Susana Martinez in attracting industrial tenants to the area. We have also seen an influx of manufacturing companies that moved their operations to Asia who are now looking to relocate back in North America, specifically to those trade areas that benefit from a geographic link to Mexico. Large box property owners gained the most in 2011 with the recent expansion of companies and businesses locating in the area. In 2011 Alaska Structures leased about 350,000 square feet of industrial space on the west mesa in Las Cruces. The company occupied one of the last remaining big boxes in the market, leaving little available big box space in the greater Las Cruces market. While 2011 was a good year for large boxes, landlords for mid-size and smaller boxes felt the pinch as tenants were able …

FacebookTwitterLinkedinEmail

Leasing activity in the Albuquerque industrial market has been inconsistent during the first half of 2010. The market cannot seem to sustain any positive momentum, with many starts and stops so far this year. As is the case in many other markets, there has been virtually no speculative construction in the Albuquerque industrial market in the past 2 years; positively, this trend has helped keep vacancy rates from rising even more than they have. The industrial market vacancy rate for Albuquerque is currently 9.4 percent, which is 1 percent higher than a year ago and more than 2 percent higher than 2 years ago. Albuquerque’s north Interstate-25 corridor continues to lead all submarkets with regard to overall leasing activity, capturing a full 85 percent of all leased space in the second quarter of this year. A significant transaction just completed in the submarket is the Southwest Regional Council of Carpenters’ 93,686-square-foot union training center at 3900 Pan American NE. Slower submarkets include the downtown area (13.3 percent vacancy) and the South Valley (15.4 percent), both of which have older inventory including buildings with functional obsolescence. The overall lack of demand for Albuquerque industrial space can be attributed in large part …

FacebookTwitterLinkedinEmail

Since the beginning of 2009, six new office projects containing 254,000 square feet of space have been delivered. As of the second quarter, these projects were 53 percent occupied. This strong absorption came primarily from one tenant, Fidelity Investments, which moved into a 112,000-square-foot build-to-suit project designed to handle the firm’s human resources outsourcing work. This project was developed by Forest City Covington in Mesa Del Sol, a master-planned, mixed-use community located just south of the airport on a mesa overlooking the Rio Grande Valley. In a rare occurrence, no multi-tenant office projects were under construction during the second quarter. This is good news for these recently completed office projects. New speculative projects are likely to remain on the drawing board as developers face financing challenges with high pre-leasing requirements. The excess amount of unsold office condominiums on the market (approximately 300,000 square feet) may aggressively compete for tenants by offering lease-to-purchase options. The Albuquerque metro area is poised for growth during the next few years. It has earned some high rankings by national media, placing it among the top metro areas. The bottom line is the Albuquerque metro area is being discovered for its excellent climate, strong workforce and …

FacebookTwitterLinkedinEmail

The proverbial good news–bad news scenario is at play when it comes to land values and transactions in Albuquerque, New Mexico. As always, the good news first. Albuquerque did not experience the effects of mammoth overbuilding and the resulting plummeting disintegration of value that has infected many other markets. The 180 degree reversal of values that commenced in the run-up to 2008 in areas like Phoenix and Las Vegas and continues as we write is in stark contrast to current Albuquerque price levels, where generally most commercial property and land in particular have suffered far less than in those areas and other markets nationally. There is, however, still bad news if you’re a local owner, prospective seller or broker trying to make a living in the land business. Historically Albuquerque has lagged behind most other areas of the country in economic timeline trends. If you subscribe to the theory that a housing sales slump is the precursor of a commercial real estate decline it’s easy to extrapolate why non-residential land here is beginning to experience a current decrease in demand. Current reports from appraisers and brokers in the residential subdivision business provide a gloomy picture of north of 10,000 lots …

FacebookTwitterLinkedinEmail

The Albuquerque metro is maintaining a steady retail market. Keys to this steadiness include year-over-year positive job growth, consistent population expansion, low unemployment and a measured expansion of retail inventory since 2000. On the other side of the coin are two items of concern: some flatness in retailer sales figures and retailers being impacted by their stores in other marketplaces outside the Albuquerque metro. Albuquerque’s retail sector of 27.28 million square feet (measured from buildings equal to or exceeding 10,000 square feet in size) has posted a vacancy rate of 7.8 percent across all product types, down from 8.1 percent last year. Asking rents for new construction shop space are $20 to $28 per square foot per year NNN. In the Cottonwood Mall and Uptown submarkets, top spaces are in the $30 to $45 per square foot range. Asking rents for new mid-size and large space range from $16 to $20 per square foot per year and $12 to $16 per square foot per year, respectively. Active submarkets within the Albuquerque metro area are Uptown, Far Northeast Heights and the South Valley. In Uptown in the past 2 years, Coronado Mall and ABQ Uptown have welcomed the leading tenants in …

FacebookTwitterLinkedinEmail
Older Posts