Liberty Property Trust plans to charge rents "that are
high $30s (per square foot), kissing $40," to Comcast and any additional
tenants for the company's planned second Center City office tower, Liberty boss
Bill Hankowsky told investors during a conference call yesterday. That's higher
than the $20s/sq ft range where Center City rents have been stuck since the
1990s. "Obviously, higher floors will charge more than lower floors,"
Hankowsky added.
Won't Center City occupancy rates and office rents fall when
Liberty opens the 59-story Comcast Innovation and Technology Center at 1800
Arch St. and Brandywine Realty Trust builds the 47-story FMC Corp. tower
planned for 30th and Walnut? asked Craig Mailman, analyst at KeyBanc Capital
Markets.
Hankowsky acknowledged the FMC and Comcast moves could dump
up to 800,000 sq ft of office space onto the market. Or less: Comcast might
take the whole new building, as it did with its first tower in 2005, reducing
the vacancy. He's hoping Comcast, plus Center City's rising population of
educated young people, will attract more tech employers to fill empty offices.
And he expects old buildings will continue to "convert to hotels and
apartment buildings... I don't see a problem." Hankowsky also confirmed
that Comcast has bought out German insurer Commerz and now owns 80% of its
original headquarters tower; Comcast will own the same proportion of the new
tower, with Liberty owning the rest of both.
John W. Guinee, analyst at Stifel & Co., asked for more
detailed cost projections. Hankowsky told him "the (planned Four Seasons
Hotel part of the tower) costs more than the office," on a per-sq-ft
basis. Also, Comcast, not Liberty, will likely spend "several hundred
million more" fitting out its new space beyond the $900 million
construction cost, he added.
Taxpayers will chip in $40 million ($10 million city, $30
million state) to connect the new tower to the underground Penn Center Septa
station and underground retail concourse. Also, Philadelphia is granting its
standard ten-year new-construction tax abatmement -- a break that made the
project financially feasible, Hankowsky said.
Besides the Comcast project, Liberty is building a 201,000
sq ft, $53.4 million office for Vanguard Group at 425 Old Morehall Road,
Malvern, and an 80,000 sq ft, $25.2
million office for Michael Forman's Franklin Square Holdings investment group
at 201 Rouse Blvd. in the Navy Yard business complex, plus warehouses in Logan
Township, Shippensburg, and in Texas, Maryland, Minnesota and Arizona, the
company reported in its year-end financial statement.
Source: Philly.com
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