Each year when I look back at the top real estate stories
and try to narrow them down to 10, I struggle. This year, I'm nearly paralyzed
with indecision.
It's a good thing.
So many significant things took place in Philadelphia's
suburban and Center City real estate scenes over the past year that I came up
with 10 big stories with no problem. I had to stop myself at 25 because it was
just getting ridiculous. I smiled, though. Philadelphia is achieving so much
these days when it comes to real estate. Outside investors are taking a shine
to it, cranes jut out of the sky, billion-dollar deals are still rare but are
happening, and there's a sense of excitement about the city's future.
The suburbs are holding their own, too, and changing
along with demographic and other forces demanding dense, walkable,
amenity-filled communities or at the least buildings and campuses. Three of its
prime markets — Conshohocken, Pa., Bala Cynwyd, Pa., and Radnor, Pa. — are
seeing rents rise and new construction around the corner. King of Prussia, Pa.,
is having its own building boom and suburban landlords are readily redefining
office space to meet the needs of tenants looking to attract and retain top
employees and appease Millennials crowding into the workforce.
Where to begin?
The year started with a bang and, though I didn't know it
at the time, it was just a harbinger of what lied ahead.
It was mid-January when Liberty Property Trust and Comcast Corp.
announced they would joint venture on a $1.2 billion new skyscraper called the
Comcast Center for Innovation and Technology that would be designed by
world-renowned architect Lord Norman Foster.
The University of Pennsylvania unveiled plans for the Pennovation Center on 23 acres at the old
Marshall Labs site on the Schuylkill River now called South Bank. That, in
conjunction with Drexel's Innovation Neighborhood, has the
potential to create an innovation cluster that could be an incredible economic
engine for the region.
Keystone Property Group bought Mack-Cali Realty Corp.'s
suburban Philadelphia office portfolio for $230 million. While that was a big
deal and made Keystone a bigger suburban office player, it also underscored a
bigger underlying transition in the commercial real estate world: Companies are
shedding their pasts and evolving into something new and redefining themselves.
Mack-Cali is now focused on multifamily development. Brandwyine Realty Trust is
now an owner of Class A office buildings in urban centers and ventured into
transportation-oriented mixed-use development, which veers from its genesis as
a suburban office landlord.
Liberty Property Trust is putting the finishing
touches on transforming itself into an industrial real estate investment trust
by selling non-core suburban office buildings.
Lubert-Adler was an investor involved in a $9
billion transaction to buy Safeway Inc. Always looking for the real estate
play, Lubert-Adler has done these sort of deals before where it buys a company
for the underlying properties it may own. Safeway owns much of its real estate
from which it operates its stores and in areas with high-barriers of entry.
Crosspoint at Valley Forge at 530 and 580
Swedesford Road in Wayne, Pa., isn't a huge building at 272,000 square feet but
its quick lease up — going from fully vacant to fully leased in a year — spoke
volumes about the direction of suburban office buildings. Tenants will
gravitate to well-designed, totally renovated office buildings packed with
amenities and cool spaces.
The east end of Center City got millions of
investment dollars and attention, and development along East Market Street is
moving forward. Demolition has begun on Girard Square that will make way for
the first phase of a mixed-use project called Market East. Brickstone Cos.,
Keystone Property Group, Pennsylvania Real Estate Investment Trust,
Goldenberg Group and others are making big bets on residential, office and
retail space in this part of town.
Camden, N.J. received more than $500 million in
tax dollars and credits to attract headquarters and other corporations to the
beleaguered city. Will it work to revive the South Jersey city that has some of
the best views of Philadelphia?
The decision to grant a second casino license to a property next to the stadiums
left two big Center City sites in limbo — Bart Blaststein's property on North
Broad Street and Goldenberg Group's site at 8th and Market streets.
Most groundbreakings are formalities, but when Brandywine Realty Trust put a shovel in the
ground for the new 49-story FMC Tower it meant another major anchor for that
corner of University City that will undergo further transformation when Amtrak comes up with its master plan for around
30th Street Station and as Drexel University establishes its gateway.
Hill International leasing 60,000 square feet at
One Commerce Square in Center City to relocate its headquarters from South
Jersey. Its more than a sizeable lease. Hill is another example of companies
from outside of Philadelphia moving into Philadelphia. It's no longer an
anomaly but a trend that is expected to continue and says a lot about how far
Philadelphia has come and hopefully where it's headed.
Let me know what I missed or if you think I got something
totally wrong.
Source: Philadelphia
Business Journal
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