JV Makes 57-Acre Land Buy for Development

By Natalie Dolce

SAN FRANCISCO, CA-Trammell Crow Co. and joint venture partner Principal Real Estate Investors have purchased a 57-acre land site fromCisco Systems Inc. located near the existing Cisco campus in North San Jose, CA. According to a prepared statement, the venture is evaluating a number of opportunities on the land, including speculative industrial development, land parcel sales and build-to-suits.

Rob Shannon, SVP with CBRE in San Jose, CA represented the joint venture in the deal. The project marketing team will also include Chip Sutherland, SVP with CBRE in San Jose, CA.

Shannon tells GlobeSt.com that this is an opportunistic land purchase at a favorable basis in a high barrier to entry market. “We see it as a once in a decade opportunity to find a sizable land parcel in a desirable infill location. The flexible zoning will allow for the owner, a joint venture between Trammell Crow and Principal Real Estate Investors, to pursue a full range of uses including office, R&D and industrial,” he says. “We are working on a phasing plan which will address user demand in each sector.”

The site is highly visible from and accessible to Highway 237. With proximity both to the San Francisco Peninsula and to the 880 Corridor leading to the Port of Oakland, it is the only available industrial site of this magnitude in Silicon Valley and will be the first modern class A industrial facilities developed in San Jose in the past 15+ years, according to a statement.

According to a previous GlobeSt.com article, there is growing demand for large manufacturing and warehousing facilities as multinational technology firms expand aggressively and attract suppliers to the region.

To read entire GlobeSt article click here.

Kidder Mathews Q1 Silicon Valley Industrial Report

Here’s an excerpt from the report:

Kidder mathews logoThe Silicon Valley industrial and warehouse markets began 2013 with strong owner/user sale activity. Speculation as to what would happen with the 411,618 square foot former Solyndra facility in Fremont was put to rest when Seagate closed on the property this quarter. Eureka Drive in Newark had two large owner/user sales, with Mitac purchasing 237,933 square feet and Unigen purchasing 127,781 square feet right up the block. In the south, Del Monaco Specialty Foods purchased a 126,378 square foot industrial building in Morgan Hill. Despite these large sales, it was not able to outpace new space available on the market. We recorded negative absorption in both property types for the first quarter.

As with many of the other submarkets, there seems to be good news all around.

Read entire report here.

Kidder Mathews Assists Orchard Partners in Buying Santa Clara Office

By Natalie Dolce

GlobeSt.com exclusively learns that Synaptics Inc. has sold 3120 Scott Blvd. and will lease back the building on a short term basis before expanding to its new headquarters. The buyer of the off-market acquisition was Orchard Partners, an owner and operator of office, R&Dand industrial assets, and a real estate investment fund managed and advised by affiliates of Apollo Global Real Estate Management LP.

While sources involved couldn’t confirm pricing to GlobeSt.com at this time, an unidentified industry source tells GlobeSt.com that it traded for approximately $13 million.

Orchard and Apollo plan an extensive, “market ready” improvement program that will start when the building becomes vacant in early summer. The proposed work includes a new, three story lobby, creation of modern, open floor plans on each floor, extensive re-landscaping and construction of an outdoor amenity area for employees.

The three-story, steel frame building features a continuous glass line with a striking architectural profile, according to a prepared statement. The property, which offers both underground and surface parking, is situated near the intersection of Highway 101 and San Tomas Expressway, providing “convenient access from all parts of Silicon Valley.”

According to Mike Biggar, managing partner of Orchard Partners, “The profile of this transaction fits our value-add investment strategy perfectly. We see an excellent opportunity to reposition a basically sound building to become a headquarters-quality facility in a very strong market segment.”

The Santa Clara market continues to be a top location for Silicon Valley technology companies, with recent and planned growth by companies such as NVIDIA, Palo Alto Networks and Service Now, all within close proximity to 3120 Scott. Other companies in the neighborhood include Intel, EMC, Huawei and Applied Materials.

“We are pleased to acquire another off-market asset in a market that we know extremely well,” Biggar adds. “Going forward, we will continue to target value-add office/R&D assets in the Bay Area as well as stabilized, high quality industrial properties throughout the country.”

The buyer and seller in the transaction were represented by Jim MaggiDave Vanoncini, andJimmy Cacho of Kidder Mathews.  The leasing assignment also will be handled by the Kidder Mathews team, as well as Christian Marent and Rob Shannon of CBRE.

Read Globe St article here.

Big $400M Buy in Silicon Valley by Ivanhoe Cambridge

By David Phillips

GlobeSt.com has learned that U.S.-Canadian concern Ivanhoe Cambridge, has spent at least $400 million for the acquisition of 73 Silicon Valley office buildings.

The company worked in partnership with affiliates of TPG and DivcoWest, who jointly led the transaction which closed in late December 2012, they plan to invest in upgrades to meet the growing demand for top tier space in the tech corridor.

This investment of more than $400 million enables us to acquire a critical mass of assets in a rental market that is seeing one of the best growth rates in the United States,” said Ivanho-Cambridge’s president, global investments, Bill Tresham in announcing the deal Wednesday. “We look forward to working with our experienced partners, TPG and DivcoWest, to increase the value of the office and R&D properties through additional investments and through strong asset management committed to meeting tenant needs.”

To read entire GlobeSt article, click here.

Studley Predicts Silicon Valley Slump

By Robert Carr

Massive high-tech demand may have caused California’s Silicon Valley, one of America’s top office markets, to get too far ahead of the game, headed for flat performance this year and increased vacancy in 2014-15.

It’s no secret that technology and energy companies are reaping the benefits of the slow-to-recover office market. While many of the major cities are seeing only slight gains in absorption, tech capitals such as the Silicon Valley market are ignoring the trend and riding the high-tech wave of big WiFi TVs, Ultrabook laptops, iPads and other must-have electronic gadgets.

Vacancy dropped to 12.2 percent in the fourth quarter, according to Studley, and that includes the submarkets of San Jose’s downtown and Milpitas, which were at 20 percent vacant. Reported absorption for the fourth quarter averages approximately half a million sq. ft., totaling 2.5 million sq. ft. for all of 2012 in the market.

However, of that total absorption number, about 1.8 million sq. ft. was from new class-A construction projects that were either speculative or build-to-suit/own in nature, according to a fourth quarter report by Cassidy Turley. Of the six large deals penned in the final three months of 2012, four of them-Apple, Netflix, GlobalFoundries and SurveyMonkey-were pre-leases of about 600,000 sq. ft. in planned or under-construction properties. All total, there is approximately 11 million sq. ft. planned or under construction in Silicon Valley.

But although times have been great, there’s just not enough demand to fill those developer and investor expectations, according to officials at the tenant rep firm Studley. Though they’re paid to low-ball a tight leasing market, Senior Vice President George Fox and Senior Managing Director Ham Southworth say the demand won’t be able to catch up to the pending supply.

“Our viewpoint is that the market cannot remain the way it is,” Fox says. “It’s going to be very tough for firms to fill the amount of space they’ve leased. It’s more likely that there will have to be some space shed. We are advising clients that if they don’t need to make a move now, don’t do it. Put a band aid on the existing situation, let’s save money and see what comes to us rather than get in the game and be bidding against other companies.”

Office market researchers at Jones Lang LaSalle predict the landlords in Silicon Valley’s top markets of Palo Alto, Mountain View and Sunneyvale will this year raise rents and reduce tenant concession packages and renewal options. Demand is so high in these markets that tech firms are leasing up non-traditional office space, causing city officials headaches over traffic and parking and sparking zoning reform talks, according to a JLL fourth-quarter report.

Thus, leasing interest will grow this year into Silicon Valley’s secondary markets, such as Milpitas, Santa Clara, Fremont and San Jose. The latter city has traditionally hosted professional service companies, but tech firms are starting to appreciate the reasonable rental rates, amenities, good public transit options and city incentives in San Jose, according to a fourth quarter Kidder Mathews report, which lists San Jose is the site of about half of the planned 8.5 million sq. ft. of office in the Valley.

Studley’s Fox says a lack of skilled engineers has been one of the main problems for tenants, a big reason he believes the companies may pull back on large-lease plans. “One of the main reasons for easing up on immigration is to get in more engineers,” he says. “You can’t just keep lateraling people over from other firms. That’s why some tech firms are looking to locate in states such as Arizona instead.”

Bay Area Storage Market Sees Increased Demand

By Natalie Dolce

 

“The local storage market has held up nicely throughout the recession.” So says Bill Hobin, president and CEO of Santa Monica, CA-based William Warren Group, whorecently chatted with GlobeSt.com about a recent self-storage facility buy the firm had—its third purchase the Oakland, CA-area.

A week ago, the firm bought Beacon Self Storage, a 954-unit self storage facility in Oakland, CA, marking its sixth Northern California facility. WWG, which owns and operates StorQuest Self Storage throughout California and several Western US markets, purchased the self storage facility from AGI Capital for $8.8 million.

According to a prepared statement, “the 62,125-square-foot facility is located at 2227 San Pablo Ave. in downtown Oakland and has excellent visibility from the 980 Freeway, a key factor in the transaction for WWG. With a daily traffic count of 200,000 cars, the location offers strategic exposure as WWG expands the StorQuest name in the Bay Area.”

Hobin tells GlobeSt.com that he has seen increased demand from larger numbers of multi-tenant building residents “that need an extra closet that they don’t have in their residential apartment.” He adds that “As downtown Oakland continues its redevelopment phase, we believe the market will continue to improve, and this particular asset is right in the middle of it.”

According to Hobin, “True economies of scale can be achieved by owning and operating multiple self storage properties in one market. This acquisition increases our regional brand visibility and gives all of our properties economic benefit from our expanding StorQuest advertising budget.”

 

Read entire GlobeSt article here.

Linkedin Inks Large Lease in Sunnyvale

Comparable details:

Address:  555 N Mathilda Ave, Sunnyvale, CA

Landlord:    JP DiNapoli Cos. Inc.

Tenant:  Linkedin

SF Leased:  560,000

Pricing:  unknown

Type:  Class A Office

Term:  12 years

This is a four building complex that will be constructed after the current buildings are demolished.  Linkedin plans on taking possession of the property during Fall 2014.

Record Leasing Brings Development Frenzy To Silicon Valley

By Carrie Rossenfeld

Silicon Valley’s status as the “most dynamic and rapidly tightening US office market” continues as GlobeSt.com receives reports of dramatic leasing activity not seen since the 1990s dot-com era. Due to shrinking vacancies throughout the Silicon Valley, a huge increase in development activity is taking place.

“From 2008 to the middle/end of 2011, there was a complete stoppage of new-development activity for class-A office space, and that was largely a function of lack of construction debt from the lenders’ perspective,” Michael Polentz, co-chair of the real estate and land-use practice at Manatt, Phelps & Phillips here, tells GlobeSt.com. “Nobody was willing to do any spec development unless they had a tenant lined up. But by the end of 2011, leasing activity of existing product started moving at lightning speed. This was due largely to the low vacancy rate, and we had some large tech players that were presumably looking out strategically three to five years, recognizing that there was not a lot of existing product available, so they started gobbling up space.” GlobeSt.com recently reported on a similar phenomenon of space hoarding in the San Francisco office market.

In 2011, the absorption rate of existing office product in Silicon Valley was approximately 2.7 million square feet, an amount that has not been absorbed here since the dot-com era of the 1990s, Polentz continues. Silicon Valley currently has about 10 million square feet of existing office product in the pipeline, and roughly one million square feet of that will start or complete construction in 2012, “so there really is a movement to capture some of the energy and the fast-paced environment of what’s being taken down from larger tech players in the Silicon Valley,” Polentz adds.

According to Studley’s first-quarter Silicon Valley office report, the region’s vacant-available rate fell for the 10th consecutive quarter, dropping 1.6% to 13.4%. The class-A rate decreased even more markedly, falling by 2.5% to 19.9%. The region is the first among major U.S. metros to reach a new peak in office-using employment, which at the end of March was 3% above its prior peak in 2008.

Significant chunks of space in the market—above 50,000 square feet—have been leased to Apple, Google, Dell, Twitter, Facebook and other thriving tech companies in the three hottest submarkets of the Silicon Valley: Cupertino (slightly over 3% vacancy as of the end of first-quarter 2012), Palo Alto (4.5%) and Mountain View (roughly 5.7%), Polentz tells GlobeSt.com. Apple, which currently occupies 80% of the office market in Cupertino, has rolled out a new spaceship headquarters design that will complete in 2015 at the earliest, and the company has taken approximately 1.2 million square feet in Sunnyvale with an additional 600,000 square feet on the horizon there by the end of the year.

For more of the Globe St article, go here.

Bay Area Market Update, February Highlights

Headlines:

  • BioMarin Pharmaceutical Inc. has signed a ten-year lease for 120,000 s.f. in the San Rafael Corporate Center.
  • American Assets, a San Diego-based REIT, has purchased One Beach Street for about $36.5 million or $376 per s.f. 
  • StumbleUpon Inc. has signed a 63,000 s.f. lease at 301 Brannan St in SoMa. 
  • In an effort to consolidate their Palo Alto offices, Barnes & Noble signed a lease for almost 208,000 s.f. at VMware’s old facility at 3400 Hillview Ave. 
  • Flextronics has inked a deal for roughly 130,000 s.f. at America Center in San Jose.

     

    Read the entire Market Update:  bay-area-market-update_02_2012

Apple Inks Another Large Lease in Sunnyvale

Tech Giant Has Now Taken At Least 475,000 Square Feet In Three Business Parks In Silicon Valley City

By Randyl Drummer

Apple Inc. has leased a new 156,000-square-foot building in downtown Sunnyvale, CA, the third large lease by the technology company in the city since last fall.

Long associated with its headquarters in Cupertino, Sunnyvale’s southerly neighbor, Apple will occupy the building in the Sunnyvale Town Center at 250 S. Mathilda Ave. at McKinley Avenue in about the third quarter, according to a news release from Sunnyvale City Manager Gary Luebbers.

In a deal revealed last month, Apple signed a long-term lease for 215,472 square feet for four buildings at E. Arques Ave. in the nearby Sunnyvale Research Center, 12 miles from Apple’s headquarters. Last fall, Apple signed a lease for buildings of 44,000 and 64,376 square feet at 995 and 975 Benicia St. in the Peery Park submarket.

Last May, Nokia merged several of its Bay Area offices into a new regional office on Mathilda and Washington avenues in the Sunnyvale Town Center, next to what will become Apple’s building. Nokia brought about 500 employees to staff the Town Center site, and Apple is expected to add about 400 employees there.

Luebbers called the Apple’s signing “an important step forward” for the Town Center redevelopment project, which like numerous other properties, has run into challenges as a result of the economic downturn.

Read more of CoStar article here.

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