Downtown San Diego Expected To Play A Starring Role In Office Development And Leasing
Dec 20, 2016 Patricia
Kirk, Bisnow, SD
San Diego developers
did not overbuild office product in the current real estate cycle or the last
one. As a result, vacancy has declined and rents continue to rise, particularly
in Downtown.
TSA Contracting president Terry Arnett, pictured center above
with Steve Grimes and Tom Coan, said his company is staying busy now doing
value-add upgrades, creative office conversions, and renovation of old
warehouses to retail, “but I think there are some things in the near
future that will create energy for new office product.”
He said the University of California San
Diego’s recently announced plans to establish a satellite campus in Downtown
will generate more office product to support the school. Arnett said JMI Realty, one of his clients,
has a residential project rising in East Village and is looking for more
opportunities there.
UCSD plans to acquire the 66k SF office
component at Holland Partner Group’s Park & Market project for a
satellite campus, a move experts believe will boost the city’s effort to create
a tech/design hub in East Village, grow jobs and jump-start an innovation
economy in Downtown.
Moderator Martin Togni (pictured right with Bradley Schnell), a
partner at Allen Matkins San Diego, said in terms of construction in San
Diego, “we’re priced pretty nicely.” He asked the panelists what they think are
the biggest incentives for attracting firms to San Diego.
Cypress Office
Properties principal Mark Wayne said when you look at the cost of
living, occupancy and employee costs—particularly for tech companies—in the Bay
Area, “San Diego, in my mind, is really a bargain, because you have the
lifestyle, you have a lower cost of living—even though it’s not cheap to live
here in San Diego—you’ve got lower occupancy costs. I think it’s very
attractive, and I’m hopeful that we’re going to continue to see movement into
San Diego from other markets, particularly from other California markets."
Google landed in Sorrento Mesa earlier this year, he
said, and other companies are coming into San Diego because there is talent
available, such as former Qualcomm employees and other types of engineers.
“I’ve just heard a rumor that Google is taking space at the WeWork facility in
Downtown,” Wayne said. “This is the kind of movement we’re hoping to see more
momentum with.”
Arnett said the availability of a strong
labor force for construction is another incentive for Bay Area companies to
relocate to San Diego. While San Francisco has a large stock of older
buildings that could be converted or replaced, there’s so much construction
going on up there, he asked, “Where are you going to get the labor?” He said
San Diego’s proximity to Mexico provides a labor advantage, because over the
next year or two the region’s labor force is expected to expand. “We’re
currently getting a good labor force out of Mexico on a daily basis.”
Wayne, pictured right with James Laverty,
said rising office rents set off a “flight to value,” with companies
moving to Class-B space. This, along with declining vacancy, has boosted
prospects for value-add office investors. Togni suggested that might be why the
400k SF to 500k SF of Class-A space exited by Qualcomm over the last couple of
years is being absorbed slowly.
Wayne, who heads up Cypress’ acquisitions,
told the audience that his company purchased five assets over the last year—two
each in San Diego and Phoenix and one in Orange County—with a total of 1.4M SF
and plans to invest $1M to $10M per property in upgrades.
Expecting the market to change as interest
rates rise, he said, “We’re still relatively bullish, but being we're higher up
in the cycle curve, we’re very focused on the highest quality and location,
while still trying to find those value-add opportunities—which if you hunt hard
enough, you can find them."
This year there clearly was a pause, Wayne
said. "It’s been a little choppy, so we’ve seen pricing come down. We’ve
been pretty aggressive on buying this year, and we’re hopeful that we’ll look
back on 2016 and view it as a good time to buy, because there clearly was a dip
in values as it relates to the investment arena.”
He said only a few new projects have come
out of the ground in this cycle and the last and have been absorbed or sold to
users. The Irvine Co built One La Jolla Center in UTC, and Kilroy Realty and American Assets Trust
are building a couple of projects near Torrey Reserve.
While various suburban companies may move
Downtown, Togni, who represents Illumina and other biotech firms, said life sciences/biotech
companies are unlikely to be among them. “The challenge in Downtown is having
space to create large floor plates for some end users, where going vertical
doesn’t work.”
He said these companies require lab space, and
so look for large campus-style facilities with large, open floor plates, which
is one reason new industrial development and redevelopment of older office
buildings and warehouses to biotech space are really hot areas right now. Wayne
agreed, sharing how a biotech user recently told him that biotech/life
sciences companies probably won’t locate in Downtown because it’s a cluster
industry.
Togi asked the panel about other challenges or
negatives for companies considering Downtown. He said while young people want a
live/work/play environment, Downtown isn’t conducive to families with children
in school. Arnett said the lack of for-sale housing, high rents and limited
parking in Downtown were also deterrants. Wayne said the largest floor plate in
a Downtown office tower is 50k SF, so a company’s growth potential is limited
in terms of contiguous space.
Tong,i said San Diego has historically
been viewed as a secondary market by institutional and foreign capital, but
wanted to know if the panel thinks these capital sources will invest in San
Diego in the near term.
“The bigger gateway markets, New York, San
Francisco, LA, Boston and Seattle have priced up and cap rates have come down
so far, I think that capital is still looking for returns, so it's looking in
places like San Diego,” Wayne said. He said from an investment and value
standpoint, there are lots of good things about San Diego. There’s been pretty
good demand and rent growth, but pricing has come down because of capital
markets and concerns about the debt market.
"But people have really stepped back this
year and paused to see what’s happening,” he said. “The election, I think, will
create some positives and some unknowns, but I do think that capital is coming.
There’s still a ton of capital on the sidelines, billions of dollars in both domestic
and foreign capital that needs placed in the next couple of years.”
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