Medical Tourism and Retail Driving Live/Work Development across the San Diego–Tijuana Border
Medical Tourism and Retail Driving Live/Work Development across the San Diego–Tijuana Border
Medical tourism and
binational retail centers are among the myriad opportunities presented by
property surrounding the San Diego–Tijuana border crossing, said members of a
panel discussion organized by ULI San Diego–Tijuana in October. But the San
Ysidro crossing—the busiest border crossing in the world—remains a daunting,
congested funnel for binational business, panelists said.
“The problem of crossing
the border has to be addressed,” said Gary London, senior principal of London
Moeder Advisors, a San Diego–based consultancy.
Panel members
participated in a recent technical assistance panel (TAP), organized by ULI San
Diego–Tijuana, to examine the challenges and opportunities presented by
development of the area around the border crossing.
A report resulting from
the TAP, Cross Border Visioning: An Exploration of a United Cross-Border
Experience, focused on a wide array of specific improvements to
streets, sidewalks, parks, signs, and landscaping to help transform the border
into a more welcoming environment.
The border section
“should be a lot more attractive, and it has opportunity to be more
attractive,” said discussion moderator Diego Velasco, principal of M.W. Steele,
an architecture and planning firm. Tijuana has been unable to connect the
development and new energy of the central part of the city to the border, which
is attracting more millennials and hipsters, Velasco said.
The scale of the
opportunity is huge, says the report, noting that the region boasts a shared
economy of $230 billion and a combined workforce of 3.8 million people. “The
Mexican real estate community is also making significant investments in
residential, commercial, and medical projects that will change the economic
complexion of the city,” the report says.
Medical tourism represents
one of the biggest opportunities, said Carolina Chavez, director of binational
affairs for SIMNSA, a health care provider. The ease of crossing the border for
less-expensive medical procedures already makes medical tourism a $700 million
business in Baja California, she said. “You can’t replicate it anywhere,”
Chavez said. “The [business] model is the border.”
Developer Grupo Abadi
built NewCity Medical Plaza, a medical tourism–focused project in Tijuana,
located 50 yards (500 m) from the border to take advantage of the “huge
opportunity,” said Isaac Abadi, chief executive officer of the project. The
eight-acre (3.2 ha) NewCity complex is envisioned as a live/work hub that
including residences.
Tijuana has an
opportunity to play an important role as an alternative housing market for
California, Abadi said. A luxury two-bedroom apartment in Tijuana, less than an
hour’s drive from downtown San Diego, might cost $300,000, less than half the
price for a similar residence in San Diego, he said. “It’s a pretty good option
for affordable housing for the U.S.,” he said.
But the flow of Americans
buying homes in northern Baja has dried up because of the many issues at the
border, London said.
In Ensenada, south of
Tijuana, Abadi’s company built the first tower of a residential complex
targeting U.S. buyers but has not moved forward with the second tower, Abadi
said. The second-home market in the area is “not booming at all,” he said.
For residential projects
trying to attract U.S. buyers, “the biggest problem is financing is so high,”
Abadi said. “It is not accessible for the U.S. customer.”
Most of the opportunities
on the border have been developed by Mexicans heading north, not Americans
going south, London noted. “It’s a one-way street,” he said. “Where we have
failed is in creating more equity in terms of the balance of the relationship.
It’s a huge opportunity we have missed.”
The flow of consumers
heading north has not translated into new development along the border and the
U.S. city of San Ysidro, London said. One of his clients is examining the
possibility of a food hall on the north side of the border as developers look
for new concepts to attract the millions of people who cross the border each
year headed north for business, shopping, and entertainment.
“The opportunity for us
is to add more jobs” in San Ysidro and develop the area as more of a
destination, London said. The area has been unable to translate the flow of
people living on the Mexico side of the border who come to shop in the United
States into new developments in San Ysidro, London said.
The elephant in the room
is the crime and security issues in Mexico, London said. But, overall, he said
he sees that “changing in a positive way.”
The TAP review committee
took a holistic approach to the issues facing the border, including
placemaking, development, and financing. The report makes specific
recommendations regarding sidewalks and pedestrian-oriented landscaping,
binational development initiatives, and the addition of new public attractions
to help make the border a destination.
The report recommends a
“P5” approach to financing, adding nonprofits, philanthropic groups, and
“people” resources to traditional public/private partnerships. The
redevelopment of the Tijuana crossing could be a model for other binational
border areas, the report concludes.
Article by: Urban Land
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