The South Florida office market is something of a nonconformist.
The real estate industry generally has been focused on urban cores offering a live-work-play lifestyle — think downtown Miami, Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach and Miami’s Brickell and Wynwood neighborhoods. But the office market increasingly has been checking out the suburbs.
Most new construction — 40 of 50 buildings in South Florida — is rising outside the central business districts. That’s 64 percent of the 4.09 million square feet under construction, according to an analysis of CoStar Group data.
“If you don’t have to be in the CBD and you have a high number of employees in a growing company, typically you would want to locate your business in the suburban areas,” said Elliot LaBreche, vice president at The Easton Group’s brokerage, Easton & Associates. “It’s a reduced commute to the office.”
Indeed, traffic congestion and the related perception of hours wasted on the roads are drivers in the office market.
“South Florida planners decades ago didn’t factor in public transit that would connect the urban cores and suburbs,” said developer Art Falcone, who has placed bets in both places. “That’s left major east-west thoroughfares congested, to say nothing of Interstate 95. If you are living in a house, you don’t want to be sitting on the I-595 or the Sawgrass Expressway or the 826 or the 836 for an hour-and-a-half of travel time. That’s not the most productive use of time,” said Falcone, whose Encore is building the mixed-use Plantation Walk, which includes a soon-to-open office tower.
Aside from traffic, urban cores are becoming price prohibitive based on land costs and rental rates, pushing developers and tenants alike to the suburbs, according to a CoStar report and interviews with experts.
Developers and brokers have touted the attraction of living within walking distance of jobs, stores and restaurants. But as office tenants elect locations outside downtown, it doesn’t mean the live-work-play concept has been abandoned. Developers have simply shifted locations.
Just look at Downtown Doral, Metropica in Sunrise, Plantation Walk and The Park at Broken Sound in Boca Raton.
“They are making little cities within the suburbs,” LaBreche said.
The 250-acre Downtown Doral and the 700-acre Park at Broken Sound offer residences as well shopping and dining venues interspersed among office buildings. Downtown Doral, which has a 3-acre park and charter elementary school, has five completed office buildings totaling 600,000 square feet with construction on another 180,000-square-foot building starting this year.
The Park at Broken Sound, previously called The Arvida Park of Commerce, late last year netted new office tenants, including pharmaceutical company TherapeuticsMD, which signed a 55,000-square-foot lease at 951 Yamato Road.
With a view of the Everglades, the 4 million-square-foot Metropica west of the Sawgrass Mills mall is under construction. Eight residential towers are due for completion this year, and the seven-story 1700 office tower is set to be finished in early 2021. The community is less than a mile from the Sawgrass Expressway, Broward County’s solid western development boundary.
“We were surprised — when we took this assignment on about five months ago — at the pent-up demand from larger regional headquarter tenants that were looking at 1700,” said Christopher Gallagher, senior vice president with CBRE Inc. in Fort Lauderdale, who is part of the team leasing Metropica’s office space.
The building, much like the rest of Metropica, was designed with an eye toward bringing an urban-feel to suburban Sunrise. For one, the same architectural firm, Cooper Carry, that’s designing the 25-story office tower at The Main Las Olas in downtown Fort Lauderdale also designed 1700 Metropica. Emphasis is being placed on bringing an urban feel to the suburbs and allowing employees to work close to home and entertainment.
“It’s all about attracting that hard-to-find millennial talent,” Gallagher said. “Someone who is looking for more of a live-work-play environment.”
To the east, the 27-acre Plantation Walk being built on University Drive is opening a 160,000-square-foot Class A office tower in the coming weeks, with Aetna Inc. signed as a tenant. For Falcone, building offices in Plantation makes financial sense for him as a developer as well as for future tenants.
“Tenants in suburban markets pay $10 to $15 less per square foot than in urban buildings,” Falcone said.
His land costs are as much as five times less in Plantation than in downtown Fort Lauderdale.
“Encore is considering developing a second Metropica office building to quench the demand,” Falcone said.
He also has a stake in the $1 billion downtown Miami Worldcenter.
Areas that in the past were thought of as bedroom communities are diversifying their offerings. Take Coral Gables, Miami’s Coconut Grove and Aventura as examples. They aren’t getting the large, self-contained mixed-use projects like Downtown Doral and Metropica. But between the existing residential sector, booming retail and new office space, they are getting live-work-play pockets, evolving into something between urban and suburban.
“We call it the sub-urban fringe,” Falcone said.
Coral Gables, Coconut Grove and Aventura, all of which Falcone put in the “sub-urban fringe” category, are getting new offices after some significant sales and leases in 2018.
More than 70 percent of the new 16-story, 97,668-square-foot Ofizzina office-condominium at 1200 Ponce de Leon Blvd. in Coral Gables has been sold since its completion last year. Manuel Crespo, the developer’s attorney who closed the sales, described Coral Gables as evolving into a live-work-play city, giving residents an opportunity to work close to home.
“Anecdotally, I can tell you a … bunch of my lawyer friends live in the area, and everybody enjoys the five-minute commute or less,” the Greenspoon Marder partner in Miami told the Daily Business Review in January.
In nearby Coconut Grove, five office buildings are under construction, including the soon-to-be-finished 95,000-square-foot, seven-story Class A building at 3310 Mary St. where Kaufman, Rossin & Co. has leased space. Also, the 85,762-square-foot, five-story One Cocowalk at 3001 Virginia St. is to be finished in a year, according to CoStar. In Aventura, the 104,544-square-foot, 11-story Ivory 214 at 2820 NE 214th St. is due to open in November, and the 96,000-square-foot, 13-story Forum Aventura at 19790 W. Dixie Highway is to be finished next month.
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Source: DBR