Philadelphia will see its first non-Comcast office tower in a generation, Jacob Adelman reports. Morgan Lewis officially signed the lease for the new headquarters they’re building at 2222 Market Street.
The project will be Center City’s first non-Comcast-Corporation-related commercial office building in more than 20 years, as developers struggle to build in a city where rents make it hard to justify the cost of new construction […]
Office buildings have continued to rise in University City and the Navy Yard, largely aided by Keystone Opportunity Zone tax benefits that help subsidize development at specific sites, but development has been more sluggish in Center City itself.
Citywide, only two office properties are under construction, both of them single-tenant buildings at the Navy Yard, according to a survey published last week by a team at real estate services firm JLL, led by its Philadelphia research director Lauren Gilchrist.
It’s important to note that the lack of new office construction is in part the result of something really positive: Philadelphia office rents are affordable! This is a comparative advantage we have over some more expensive cities.
Since the asking rents here are much lower, and are considered too low to induce much new construction, it’s been more common to see existing office buildings being renovated than new office buildings being built.
This too is not a bad thing on its own, but what is a problem is that it’s a sign of fairly weak job growth.
Why should you care about this, if you don’t especially care about Big Law headquarters or office construction?
As Paul Levy of Center City District often points out, the Center City and University City office districts hold about 53 percent of all jobs in the city—across all skill levels and educational backgrounds.
These are the highest-opportunity areas in the city, and it matters to everybody how well they’re doing at growing jobs, and what kind.
Big downtown office towers create a lot of different kinds of jobs, both during construction and on an ongoing basis with the managing of all aspects of running the buildings and employers and organizations within.
A Philly office market that was growing about average for big U.S. cities would be creating a lot more non-college job opportunities for people, in addition to jobs for professionals.
A new Snapshot of the commercial real estate market from JLL compares Philadelphia to the top 20 central business districts (CBDs) in the U.S. and finds that we’re second-to-last in office construction, even with a below-average 9.9-percent vacancy rate that’s creating some pressure to expand.
Walking around the Philadelphia central business district today, you’ll struggle to find many office properties under construction, even with the direct vacancy of that 9.9 percent, which is below the U.S. average. In fact, only two office properties are under construction: 300 Rouse and 400 Rouse, both single-tenant buildings at the Navy Yard, totaling 231,000 square feet—just 0.5 percent of Philadelphia’s CBD office inventory. This isn’t the case across the top 20 U.S. CBDs, where over 52 million square feet of office product are under construction. Looking at things another way, if office construction in Philadelphia happened at the average rate experienced across other CBDs, Philly would have roughly 2 million square feet of office product currently being developed […]
One market fundamental that continues to plague Philadelphia developers is average asking rents. Of the top 20 CBDs, Philadelphia currently has the fifth-lowest rent. However, this hasn’t restricted construction in CBDs in places like Minneapolis and Pittsburgh, which have significantly higher vacancies and lower asking rents than Philadelphia but together boast 2.7 million square feet of office developments under construction.
JLL notes that there are currently 7 million square feet of office space at varying stages of the planning pipeline here—along Market Street and in University City—so Philadelphia may not have the second-lowest distinction for all that much longer.
This would be a great shot in the arm for the local economy that would push us even closer to full employment.
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