One-Stop Shopping
By Renee DeGross
Retail Traffic Magazine
August 1, 2005
You couldn't walk more than 10 steps at the ICSC Spring
Convention in Las Vegas, last May, without tripping over
a mixed-use project proposal. Yes, folks have been talking
about this for a couple years now. But when Simon Property
Group, the largest retail real estate owner in the country,
is talking up building apartments, office space, hotels
— and even self-storage, then you know the trend has
fully arrived.
Simon has launched a $1 billion “asset intensification”
program aimed at squeezing more dollars out of its existing
land holdings. There is talk of putting high-rise apartments
atop (or in place of) anchor space. Its recent $72 million
St. Johns Town Center in Jacksonville, Fla., included the
first hotel at a Simon Property since the 1980s. The Indianapolis-based
company has also noticed a lot of land at the back of its
parcels where self-storage centers could fit quite nicely.
The leap today is that mixed-use is now pervasive in the
retail real estate world with nearly every developer from
Simon at the top down to the smallest strip center REITs
talking about such projects.
Of course, there's also still some debate on what truly
constitutes mixed-use. Does it simply mean adding another
layer — say some apartments or second-story office
space — to any development? Or does it have to be
bigger than that?
Robert Stark, CEO of Ohio-based Stark Enterprises and developer
of the $420 million, 1.6 million-square-foot Crocker Park
in Westfield, Ohio, described it: “true mixed-use
density as a development that creates walkable multi-level,
live-work-play neighborhood loaded with stimulating and
engaging pedestrian-level detail creates ‘experience,’
the core of exciting urban living. A lifestyle center with
some apartments above the stores wouldn't necessarily fit
that definition.” (See Stark's Expert Analysis on
the importance of mixed-use to the survival of retail developers
on page 57.)
Developers are also engaged in a debate over the best way
to put these projects together. On one hand mixed-use is
forcing retail firms to form alliances with other commercial
developers.
But on the other, it's leading some companies to conclude
that they should broaden their internal capabilities so
they don't always have to rely on others. That's a big change
for the industry.
Through A Separate Lens
Up to now, the few diversified developers — Cousins
Properties, Forest City Enterprises and Vornado Realty Trust,
for example — were often viewed through a separate
lens from the majority of companies that specialized. Or
else, they stayed private, like Struever Bros. Eccles &
Rouse Inc., which has been content to quietly rebuild much
of the Baltimore waterfront and other areas outside Maryland,
from residential to office to retail, on its own. Its latest
venture is a $50 million redevelopment of Heritage Harbor
along the waterfront in Providence, R.I., with offices,
retail and residential.
You don't have to convince Joel Murphy, president of Cousins
Properties' retail division. “In the beginning of
REITs, there were a few things the industry viewed as taboo,”
says Murphy. “But we did them gleefully.” For
decades, Cousins has developed office, industrial and retail
buildings, including the Avenue lifestyle centers.
Analysts chided diversified developers for not focusing
on a core property type. New Plan Excel Realty Trust, for
example, in recent years finished a makeover that saw it
dump all of its garden apartments and outlet centers to
focus entirely on community and neighborhood shopping centers.
And Federal Realty Trust was roundly (and deservedly) slammed
for its massive flameout at Santana Row, which even led
to the ouster of then-CEO Steven Guttman.
Vornado Rules
But today there is no developer hotter than Vornado, largely
because of its entrepreneurship and ability to switch between
property types. Companies long-known for being the kings
of one property type are bridging out. In a prelude to its
talk of spanning to other commercial real estate sectors,
for example, Simon Property Group, the regional mall behemoth,
bought up companies specializing in community center development
and outlet centers.
Similarly, Kimco Realty Corp. is buying car dealerships
in Canada through a joint venture partnership with Capital
Automotive REIT, adding apartments to a few strip centers
and taking part in a massive military base redevelopment.
A Phoenix Arises
Oh yeah, and Santana Row? Today the $455 million San Jose,
Calif. albatross, which suffered from horrific cost overruns
and a devastating fire right before its planned opening,
has retail and restaurant space that is more than 90 percent
leased and pulling in $600 per square foot. Its 255 apartments
are 98 percent leased.
In all, the project has reached its initial yield projections.
And the company recently made the choice to convert the
apartments to condos and add new phases to the development.
“On the retail side, you're seeing mall developers
looking to add apartments or multi-family components to
existing malls or lifestyle centers,” says Lou Taylor
with Deutsche Bank in New York. “But we don't expect
office developers to become retail developers.” Taylor
added that he is not ruling out the possibility of other
types of cross-format mergers.
In a possible bellwether deal, Cousins recently acquired
Atlanta-based Gellerstedt Group, a privately-held niche
player that builds multi-family urban units. Gellerstedt
also specializes in construction management and build-to-suit
services in Atlanta. The deal will enable Cousins to tackle
residential as well. Previously, Cousins and Gellerstedt
chairman and CEO Larry Gellerstedt III had worked in joint
ventures.
For example, Cousin's partnered with Gellerstedt's former
company, Beers Construction Co., to jointly develop a 117-unit
condo complex in Atlanta's Midtown section, when Cousins
acquired the company.
“We wanted to bring that expertise in-house,”
Murphy said. “Now we can do any kind of residential.”
“It makes sense for Cousins to have all the arrows
in their quiver to develop mixed-use properties,”
says analyst Cedrick Lachance with California-based Green
Street Advisors. “Cousins knows how to apply the development
recipe.”
Cousins will develop its newest mixed-use project —
Terminus — in the heart of Atlanta's trendy Buckhead
neighborhood with about 600,000 square feet of office space,
75,000 square feet of retail and 60,000 square feet of residential.
In the transaction, which closed in June, the company picked
up an in-town tract of land.
“Finally, after 50 years of humiliation and defeat
at he hands of suburban sprawl, urban centers can provide
something the suburbs cannot: true mixed-use density in
authentic and compelling ratios of mixed-use [apartments
and office] over retail — ratios of 10-to-1, 15-to-1,
20-to-1 and beyond,” Stark says.
Other developers, too, are looking to redefine their niches.
Sembler Co., a power center titan in the Southeast, is
one such company.
“In a few years, people won't just call us a retail
developer,” said Jeff Fuqua, development division
president with Sembler Co. in Atlanta. “We'll be called
a mixed-use developer.”
For years, the St. Petersburg, Fla.-based company focused
on developing power and grocery-anchored shopping centers.
Now its attention is on mixed-use and developing its own
residential atop its retail in several projects in Florida
and Atlanta.
Going It Alone
“We usually bring in developers and make them partners,”
Fuqua said. “But we wanted to give it a try and learn
it. We've gotten very good and we are going to do our own.”
In Sembler's Edgewood Retail District, a mixed-use venture
close to completion several miles from downtown Atlanta,
the company hired consultants to help develop plans for
32 condo units atop stores, while it honed its expertise.
The project, with 600,000 square feet of retail, is among
the first where Sembler dabbled in building its own apartments.
But the company still brings in partners on larger projects,
including Perimeter Place near Perimeter Mall, which includes
a high-rise condo with 220 residential units and a six-story
apartment complex that houses retail on the bottom floor,
Fuqua said.
“Lincoln Properties is building our retail space
and we are reimbursing them,” Fuqua said. “We
own the rights below for the retail. Deals are very complicated,
but we're rewriting deals to protect retailers.”
As David Marks of Marketplace Advisors in Maitland, Fla.
puts it: “There seems to be a real synergy. As sophisticated
developers learn from their partners, we see them getting
into different types of land use.”
But that remains at the cutting edge. For now, partnership
is the way most developers are handling it, finding homebuilders
and commercial developers to build the non-retail space.
And that's the way it should be, according to Bethesda,
Md.-based Federal Realty Investment Trust. Though Santana
Row has worked out in the end, Federal Realty is not shy
to talk about what it has learned.
“Some people mistakenly said we were unlucky with
respect to the time,” says Don Wood, president and
CEO of Federal Realty. “But it would have been more
prudent to lay off some of that risk.”
Today, the 700,000-square-foot, $500 million project, an
urban redevelopment with 66 stores, 18 restaurants, five
spas, a hotel and residences, is viewed as the company's
most ambitious, and a blueprint for the firm's future.
In the end, however, the risks, and how they were overcome,
taught Federal Realty “a ton,” says Wood. For
instance, as the company plans more mixed-use projects in
the future, it will mitigate risks with joint ventures and
public-private partnerships.
Federal Realty's latest project is a mixed-use development
at the site of an old mall, Assembly Square, and adjacent
power center with Bed Bath & Beyond, TJ Maxx, Sports
Authority and other tenants just outside Boston, in Somerville,
Mass.
Several months ago, the company acquired the 330,000-square-foot
enclosed mall and power center for $100 million with plans
to assemble 50 surrounding acres.
Wood says while the company works on plans, it's bringing
in a 7 percent return on the property from rents at the
power center. Federal Realty is talking to residential and,
potential office partners for the project.
Joint ventures aren't without their own problems. For one
thing, they add new layers to deals. Michael Beyard, a senior
fellow with Urban Land Institute, a Washington, D.C.-based
nonprofit research and educational organization, says joint
ventures bring in ownership questions, operational and finance
issues, environmental conundrums, and even parking problems.
“It adds to the complexity of deals,” Beyard
says. “For instance, how do you finance a condo deal
if retail is underneath?”
In cases where retailers require specific prototypes, design
issues can result when condos or rental units are built
above. Parking is another problem.
Collaboration
Some analysts think consolidation won't be as big a trend
as joint ventures.
“I'm hearing more developers are going to partnerships,”
says analyst Merrie Frankel with Moody's Investors Services,
a provider of credit-risk management solutions in New York
City.
But most say the line between retail developers and other
types of developers will nonetheless continue to blur. “It
might solve some of the difficult dilemmas that arise out
of joint ventures,” says Beyard.
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