Willard G. Rouse
III has been gone a decade, but his handiwork - Liberty Property Trust -
continues to thrive.
Liberty
Property's ongoing success stands as testament to Rouse's forward thinking, but
also the mutability of clever corporations, which often must shift and remake
themselves to keep ahead.
As Liberty
Property is doing now under the leadership of William P. Hankowsky, who served
his apprenticeship as president of the Philadelphia Industrial Development
Corp. (Full disclosure: Hankowsky is part owner of The Inquirer.)
In a conference
call last week to discuss Liberty Property's third quarter (funds from
operations available to common shareholders were 57 cents per share, compared
with 64 cents a year ago) Hankowsky explained where the company was going and
why.
Once known for
cutting-edge office parks, such as the Great Valley Corporate Center in Chester
County, Liberty Property increasingly sees its future in industrial warehouse
space.
"Over the
last year or so, we've been thinking very much about Liberty Property's
strategy for the next five years," Hankowsky said. "The conclusion is
we want to be more industrial and less suburban office."
In fact,
Hankowsky said Liberty Property's future was about two-thirds industrial and
one-third office.
To that end, the
company earlier this month spent $1.47 billion to buy the operating partnership
of Cabot Industrial Value Fund III, which brings with it 177 properties and 23
million square feet of industrial space.
Liberty Property
also is selling 6 million to 7 million square feet of suburban office and flex
properties for $650 million to $750 million, Hankowsky said. The purchase of
Cabot and sale of office space will leave Liberty Property with about 60
percent industrial, Hankowsky said.
"We think
there'll be generally less demand for office space than there has been
historically because of efficiency," Hankowsky said, linking that change
to technology. "I don't need file cabinets. I don't need law libraries. I
don't need server rooms because I can do it in the cloud, so the number per
square feet per employee is going down."
The flip side has
been the growth of e-commerce.
"That's a
whole phenomenon that requires industrial buildings that have a lot more
parking, that run three shifts, run seasonally, just operate in a way that's
different than a rack building serving a network of stores," Hankowsky
said. "And that's a systemic change in that those buildings are needed and
necessary."
For Liberty
Property, then: "We see a world where there is enhanced demand for
industrial product."
Source: Philly.com
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