The Pittsburgh retail market remained tight throughout the third quarter of 2011, maintaining a vacancy rate at just over 5 percent. Absorption within the market edged close to 200,000 square feet, with new big box and specialty retailers entering the region. The influx of grocery and discount chains continued with the opening of Trader Joe’s in Pittsburgh’s South Route 19 submarket. The 12,000-square-foot specialty market is the company’s second location in the area. In addition, Fresh Market confirmed its entrance in the Pittsburgh region just down the street from Trader Joe’s. The high-end specialty grocer has purchased a former Roth Carpet site and plans to demolish the existing building in preparation for a new 18,000-square-foot store. Construction is scheduled to commence in the spring of 2012. Big box retailers ALDI, Bottom Dollar, Walmart and BJ’s Wholesale Club are scouting the area for additional locations as well. Bottom Dollar Foods has taken occupancy of more than 60,000 square feet year-to-date and has approximately 40,000 square feet in two new locations scheduled to open in early 2012. The discount food chain prefers to anchor strip centers or neighborhood shopping centers within the area’s suburban submarkets. Though development activity has been largely focused …
Retail
The Raleigh/Durham retail market consists of approximately 41 million square feet and serves a population of about 1.75 million people. Raleigh, Durham and Chapel Hill comprise the “Research Triangle” metropolitan region, which is continuously ranked among the best areas in the nation to live and work. The retail market has an overall low vacancy rate and remains relatively healthy despite the lingering recession. A period of remarkable growth has slowed and only a handful of new developments opened in 2011. These include Park West Village, a 373,748 square feet power center located in Morrisville at Highway 54 and Cary Parkway, and the 57,511-square-foot Market at Colonnade, a shopping center anchored by Whole Foods and located on Six Forks Road in north Raleigh. Another notable project is the renovation of the 200,000-square-foot Waverly Place in Cary. Few new development opportunities are expected in the near future and positive absorption of vacancy for anchor and shop space has been encouraging, as centers have continued to strengthen albeit at lower rental rates. Job growth drivers are simply not there to support the rapid retail growth the area experienced prior to the recession. Trends in the marketplace include expansion of discount chains such as …
Emboldened by renewed job growth and improving sales, retailers will push forward with new store openings in Puget Sound, which will ease the use of concessions. Leasing velocity in the Seattle-Tacoma retail market has built momentum through 2011, led by regional and national chains occupying vacant sites in high-traffic corridors. King County trade areas such as the Northgate/Central and Eastside/Bellevue submarkets have been the primary beneficiaries of resumed tenant expansions, but most suburban areas also recorded a modest upturn in leasing volume this year. The broadening recovery enabled landlords to hold the line on concessions. While the rate of recovery will remain strongest in King County heading into 2012—aided by move-ins from Ross Dress for Less, Big Lots and several grocery chains—tenant demand for established centers in Pierce and Snohomish counties will build. In addition to a collection of smaller lease transactions, nearly a dozen regional and independent retailers have secured junior-anchor and big-box sites this year, with many of the leases set to commence over the next nine months. Seattle retail developers completed about 695,000 square feet of space during the 12 months ending in the third quarter, an increase from the delivery of 250,000 square feet one year …
CBRE recently completed a comprehensive study on the state of big box vacancy in Orange County. It showed that while the county continues its struggle to replace large tenants lost during the recession, there is progress being made in this important sector of the retail market, particularly in Class A locations. There are currently 59 big box vacancies (20,000 square feet or larger) in 55 centers with a total of 2.3 million square feet within the county. In the past two years, approximately 1.6 million square feet of big box retail has been absorbed. The question now is, what’s left and when will it be absorbed? Since the downturn, retailers have had their pick of great real estate. Class A space that was near impossible to find in Orange County during the boom years became available for the first time. The most active retailers, including Wal-Mart, Kohls, grocers and gyms, moved quickly to take advantage of the opportunities. In many cases, these retailers even modified their prototypes in order to do so. With most of the Class A space quickly absorbed, our study found that 48 of the 59 boxes currently remaining, or 84 percent, are located in B or …
Operations will remain tight in the urban core as retailers expand to premier locations in Boston, while stagnant building activity and an uptick in demand will allow operators to backfill under-utilized space in the suburbs. As businesses expand payrolls in the Financial District, residents will migrate toward major employment hubs and entertainment districts in surrounding areas. As a result, global and national retailers will expand or relocate from older centers in peripheral neighborhoods to newer, redeveloped infill properties in Boston. Prime shopping districts in Back Bay, including Newbury Street, Commonwealth Avenue, and Boylston Street will garner the most consideration this year as tenants lease quality, street-level store fronts with high visibility. As available space shrinks in the submarket, vacancy will drop to a metrowide best of 3.4 percent this year, giving owners enough leverage to raise rents. Meanwhile, muted construction and large lease signings will support positive net absorption in third-ring suburbs such as Bristol County and Merrimac Valley submarkets, reducing vacancy an average of 100 basis points this year. Solid retail sales and job growth encouraged tenants to move forward with expansions, underpinning a 60-basis-point decrease in vacancy over the past year to 6.5 percent. In the prior 12 …
One of the hardest-hit real estate segments, both in Cleveland and across the nation, has been the retail sector. A dramatic reduction in consumer spending over the past four years has caused significantly lower retail sales and resulted in a long list of bankrupt retailers and struggling retail centers. While the pullback by the consumer has ultimately led to numerous instances of shuttered stores and bank-owned retail centers across the region, there have also been some noticeable trends that illustrate the underlying resiliency and strength of this segment. Digging in the dirt Although the pace of retail development has been at a near standstill for the past few years, some projects have begun to take shape. The furthest along is a new 86,000-square-foot Giant Eagle in Broadview Heights, which is under construction with an early 2012 opening planned. The South Euclid/Cleveland Heights area has also emerged as a favored development location with two large-scale projects. The long-planned expansion and renovation to the northern half of Cedar Center began in the spring with the construction of a new GFS Marketplace. When fully completed in late 2012, this project is expected to contain approximately 60,000 square feet of total retail as well …
The Columbus retail market finished the third quarter with moderate positive absorption of 118,454 square feet, according to Colliers International. This marks the sixth consecutive quarter of positive absorption. Still, consumer demand and confidence have remained stagnant over the past six months. In construction news, both the 44,000-square-foot Rave movie theater and the nearby 55,000-square-foot Hobby Lobby Project in Grove City were completed in the third quarter. To read the entire Columbus retail report, click here. To read third-quarter reports on other property sectors, click here.
Business headlines over the past few months have been full of sunny reports from Seattle: Boeing, for example, is in full swing thanks to the production ramp up of the 787 and the backlog of orders for both the 787 and 737, representing a workload of more than 5 years. The tech sector is hopping here as well, with Google adding up to 840 jobs, Amazon doubling the positions available from a year ago to 1,900, and solid growth at Facebook. This all takes place, of course, in a market that happens to include big-name employers like Microsoft and the increasingly active Gates Foundation, and strong sectors such as Biotech and Pacific Rim trading. Given this strong and diverse economic base, then, it is perhaps no surprise that Seattle is robust compared with many other U.S. markets. This is not to say the recession had no effect — a year ago, rents in empty boxes were leasing at discounts of up to 40 percent of what had been paid by previous tenants. However, the market here has gradually stabilized, and those discounts have shrunk to 15 to 20 percent of previous rental rates. Today, in fact, retailers like HomeGoods, Sports …
It is no secret that, like much of the State of Michigan, the Motor City has not exactly been motoring along with regard to retail performance during the last few years. Southeast Michigan has been struggling, and since the beginning of the national recessionary cycle a few years ago, the state has been held up as an example of taking a retail roundhouse right on the chin from a faltering economy. A more nuanced view, however, reveals some more interesting — and in some cases more positive news — with regard to where southeast Michigan stands today, and how the region seems to be setting up for future growth. In a macro sense, it is accurate that Michigan was more challenged than the rest of the country by the initial economic downturn. There was a perception, real or not, that the struggles in the auto industry would substantially exacerbate the impact of the recession. The state’s unemployment rate was higher than the national average and Michigan was bleeding population. While some of those difficult circumstances and dire predictions seemed to be holding up two or three years ago, the state has made a pretty significant recovery in the last 10 …
Market Overview Unlike most major markets across the U.S., the retail real estate landscape in the Washington, D.C. MSA, which includes the inner-city core as well as Northern Virginia and nearby Maryland, looks quite similar to that of 2006. While most big cities face the issue of too much supply and not enough demand, D.C. is busy developing new centers to keep up with demand. For example, Hines’ CityCenterDC project in downtown D.C., now under construction on the 10-acre site of the District’s old convention center, is a 2.5 million-square-foot mixed-use project that promises to have a major impact on the East End of downtown. The 1.3 million-square-foot first phase, slated for completion in late 2013, is set to include office buildings, condos, apartments, 185,600 square feet of retail, a park and a central plaza. Upon completion, the retail portion will total about 400,000 square feet. Inside the Beltway, 10-acre sites aren’t easy to come by and, given its critical mass, CityCenterDC has the potential to be a game-changer in this market. Two of the city’s waterfront areas are also seeing major development. Thanks to the efforts of Forest City Washington and a host of other developers, the Southeast Waterfront …