Monthly Archives: February 2006

Dallas Logistics Hub Named Best Deal Announced For 2005

Dallas Logistics Hub Named Best Deal Announced For 2005

DALLAS, Texas (February 24, 2006) The Dallas Logistics Hub has been recognized as the Best Deal Announced of 2005 by the Dallas Business Journal as part of their “Best Real Estate Deals of 2005” awards. The Hub, a project of The Allen Group, a major developer of office and industrial properties, including rail-served distribution and logistics parks, is an innovative commercial enterprise that will have a significant, positive impact on the Dallas area economy and will uplift industry across North America.

The Dallas Logistics Hub will be the largest new logistics park in North America and will help position Dallas as the No. 1 trade hub in the Southwest region. The Hub will serve as the primary pipeline for the distribution of goods throughout the U.S., which will allow distributors and manufacturers to reach the greatest percentage of U.S. consumers.

Featuring 6,000 acres of industrial land advantageously encompassed by the Union Pacific Intermodal Facility, the BNSF rail line, five major highway connectors including I-20, I-35, I-45, the proposed Loop 9 and Lancaster Executive Airport, the Dallas Logistics Hub boasts unparalleled development potential, and is set to accommodate 60 million square feet of vertical development upon complete build out.

“We are proud to receive this recognition from the Dallas Business Journal,” said Richard S. Allen, managing partner and CEO of The Allen Group. “The Hub is the result of the dedication by all parties involved, working together toward a common goal of benefiting the communities and the economies of Dallas, Lancaster, Wilmer and Hutchins. We look forward to continuing this relationship as The Hub grows to meet its potential, providing key economic benefits and jobs throughout the area.”

As it continues to expand, Dallas Logistics Hub will house major distribution centers, warehouses and rail-served facilities, as well as hotel and truck stop facilities. The milestone project is expected to generate approximately 30,000 jobs over the next 10-20 years.

The Allen Group is a commercial development firm specializing in rail-served industrial parks and build-to-suit facilities, including Class A office buildings. In the past decade, the Company has developed over half a billion dollars in commercial and industrial properties, ranging in size from 35,000 square feet to 1.7 million square feet, as well as three master-planned industrial parks: the International Trade and Transportation Center (www.ittc.com); MidState 99 Distribution Center (www.midstate99.com) and the Dallas Logistics Hub (www.dallaslogisticshub.com), the largest new logistics park in North America.

The Allen Group, based in San Diego with regional offices in Visalia and Bakersfield, Calif., as well as Dallas, Texas, is trusted by Fortune 500 companies such as VF Corporation, Cox Communications, FedEx, International Paper Company, Intuit, Kraft Foods and Wal-Mart Stores. The Company has major industrial and office projects under development in San Diego, Bakersfield, Shafter, Sacramento, Visalia (Calif.) and Dallas. For more information about The Allen Group, please visitwww.allengroup.com.

Good Deeds; Good News

VISALIA TIMES-DELTA

Good Deeds; Good News: Rotary Club Thankful for Donations

February 13, 2006

People and businesses who have made Tulare County a safer place were honored this month by the Visalia Breakfast Rotary club.

All helped the Visalia club raise the $144,000 it needed to place 15 automated external defibrillators throughout the county in schools, churches and workplaces.

The devices analyze a person’s heart rhythm and use voice and visual prompts to tell users exactly what to do if someone’s heart stops beating.

On Feb. 2, the club presented the 15 defibrillators it was able to purchase to recipients as part of the Heart Safe Community Program and honored those who helped sponsor their purchase.

Sponsors included, the Mangano Company, California Dairies, McMillian Homes, Sam Sciacca/Steve Luisi, the Allen Group, Quad Knopf Inc., Visalia Breakfast Rotary, Valley Business Bank, the California Endowment, U.S. Tower Corp and Del Lago Development.

The defibrillators will be placed at Hurley Elementary School, La Joya and Divisidero middle schools, El Diamante, Redwood and Woodlake high schools, Sierra Village Retirement Community, Sons of Italy Hall, City Hall East, the Visalia Convention

Center, the city’s corporation yard, Anthony Community Center, City of Visalia Recreation Center, Woodlake Police Department and at a Tulare school site.

Also honored during the meeting as a Paul Harris Fellow was Dr. Ron Marconi, medical director of Kaweah Delta’s rehabilitation hospital.

In all, the club has helped with the placement of 52 defibrillator units throughout Visalia.

Developers Focus on Central Valley

California Real Estate Journal

Developers Focus on Central Valley – Open Land is Attracting Industrial Building and Accompanying Retail, Residential Growth

February 6, 2006

The Central Valley’s landscape has gone from cucumbers to concrete, as industrial, residential and retail developments dot the once-open farming land and oil fields. Industrial developers who capitalized on the historical abundance of land in the Inland Empire are running out of options in Riverside and San Bernardino counties. The similar landscape of Kern County is beginning to attract both builders and businesses.

Some officials in the Central Valley said the San Joaquin Valley has a distinct advantage over Southern California because the region is closer to Northern California and Nevada. For example, a single warehouse facility in the town of Shafter, 15 miles north of Bakersfield, can serve both the Los Angeles and San Francisco Bay areas plus Las Vegas in the same day.

“We are now on a lot of companies’ radars,” said Rob Dunn, a member of the San Joaquin Valley Economic Development Committee. “We are right in the middle of everything here, and trucks can deliver goods throughout the state and to Las Vegas within one day. You can’t do it with the long distances from the south and the traffic jams in L.A.”

Another asset to the growth of the area is the infrastructure. State Route 58 provides access to Interstate 15, which passes through Las Vegas, and to Interstate 40, which passes through Arizona. Some day, Route 58 may be upgraded into a four-lane freeway and be extended west to I-5.

On top of that, RailAmerica in 2003 opened the $14.2 million San Joaquin Valley Railroad rail corridor that connects the city of Huron to Visalia. It’s giving commercial and industrial customers along that corridor, which is between I-5 and Route 99, improved freight service and an increased opportunity for development.

Most distribution centers being built in the Central Valley are located along Route 99 instead of I-5 because the latter has little access to developed infrastructure and no access to water.
Several large companies have built or are planning to build warehouses and distribution centers along Route 99 from Kern to Fresno counties.

In Shafter, Richmond, Va.-based Performance Food Group will employ 350 people when it completes a $35 million, 125,000- square-foot distribution warehouse for large restaurants such as TGI Friday’s, Mimi’s CafĂ© and Outback Steakhouse.

Nearby, Target Stores Inc.’s 1.7 million-square-foot distribution center employs 1,000 at the Shafter International Trade and Transportation Center, a 700-acre industrial park on the main line of the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad that includes an intermodal facility for direct rail service to the ports of Los Angeles, Long Beach and Oakland.

Harvey May, former president of the industrial park, said he’s happy that Target recognized the lower land costs, strategic location, abundant labor supply, access to an intermodal facility and the foreign trade zone designation.

The Shafter center is part of the Los Angeles Foreign Trade Zone, which provides state tax breaks to companies’ activities within its borders.

Distribution centers appear across the valley. For example, in Tulare, U.S. Cold Storage has a 7.3 million-cubic-foot cold storage facility and 2.2 million square feet of dry warehouse space. In Tracy, Kellogg USA Inc. has a 750,000-square-foot distribution center and Safeway Stores Inc. has a 1.9 million square- foot facility.

Away From the Corridor
In Visalia, where the city annexed 640 acres of land to add to the Visalia Industrial Park after Jo-Ann Stores Inc. built a 630,000-square-foot distribution complex, VF Outdoor is building an 817,000-square-foot warehouse at the Midstate99 Distribution Center.

“The demand is so great the place is running out of room,” said Mike Cully, president of the Visalia Chamber of Commerce. “We had to do the annexations.”

Midstate99, with highways nearby and rail service on site, reaches 35 million people within a 300-mile radius. Michael Egeck, president of VF Outdoor, said the warehouse development would help the company’s growth in the western U.S. “We also see an excellent and great business environment for this to happen,” Egeck said.

Midstate99 is part of the Foreign Trade Zone 226, the Merced Regional Foreign Trade Zone, which includes seven counties in the Central Valley and stretches from Merced south to near Bakersfield. Hanford and Lemoore, both within Enterprise Zones, also offer financial incentives and credits to businesses.

And, 70 miles north of Los Angeles, the Tejon Industrial Complex is a master-planned site in a 500-acre foreign trade zone that when built out will offer 9 million square feet of space. The 1,450-acre Tejon Industrial Complex is home to a 1.7 millionsquare- foot distribution center by IKEA. Other companies have shown interest in building facilities at Tejon Ranch.

“What’s driving the growth here is cheap land costs, which had drawn major developers and big-name companies,” said Danny Ordiz, principal with Bakersfield-based Ordiz-Melby Architects Inc., a company with 40 projects under construction or in the planning stages that total 1 million square feet of space and $230 million in construction costs.

The Central Valley has 6 million square feet of industrial space. Fresno and Bakersfield together have another 3.7 million square feet of space, either under construction or in the planning stages.

The Central Valley offers low lease and land prices compared to its neighbors to the south. Industrial land per square foot based on improved land ranges from 80 cents to $2.20 per square foot. The same industrial land in much of Los Angeles County would be
triple that much.

Monthly lease rates per square foot average from 25 cents to 28 cents in the Central Valley to 30 cents in the Inland Empire to 42 cents per square foot in Los Angeles County.

The Central Valley has seen its population increase to 3.3 million. Today, Bakersfield’s population is nearing 300,000, and Fresno’s is close to 450,000. The median price of a home in the valley is $300,000, compared to $540,000 statewide.

“People are moving here because not only are there jobs here but housing is cheaper, too,” Dunn said. “It’s interesting to watch the market change.”

With such population growth, the Central Valley is attracting national retailers. In Madera County, an 800,000-square-foot power center will include big-box stores such as Lowe’s and Kohl’s; and in Tulare, a 1 million-square-foot power center will consist of big-box stores and an outdoor lifestyle center with high-end retailers, entertainment and upscale restaurants.

In Visalia, building permits totaled $300 million in 2004, a $50 million increase year-over-year. Monterey-based DBO Development developed the $110 million, 230,000-square-foot Packwood Creek shopping center, designed by Long Beach-based Perkowitz & Ruth.

Dallas Logistics Hub(1)

Dallas Business Journal

Dallas Logistics Hub

February 24, 2006

At build-out, several decades from now, the planned Dallas Logistics Hub will accommodate 60 million square feet of industrial space worth nearly $2 billion at today’s valuation, according to the project’s developer, The Allen Group.

The project is one of the largest of its kind now under way in the United States, according to Richard Allen, managing partner and CEO of the California-based company. It likely will generate 35,000 to 40,000 jobs in an area of southern Dallas that is hungry for economic development, he said.

“Obviously, the impact of jobs is going to be huge,” Allen said. “It’s going to be a huge driver of economic development in the region. And it’s a significant project not only for southern Dallas, but for the country. It’s really driven by the trade routes.”

The inspiration for The Allen Group’s project was Ross Perot Jr.’s sprawling 17,000-acre AllianceTexas development around Alliance Airport in Fort Worth. Richard Allen became familiar with that project during the 1990s.

It was an image the California entrepreneur couldn’t forget: An inland industrial and residential development wrapped around an airport and a railroad intermodal yard, all sitting adjacent to major highways.

Earlier this decade, Allen returned to the Dallas- Fort Worth area, lured this time by the prospect of a new $100 million, 360-acre intermodal yard overlapping the small cities of Wilmer and Hutchins in southern Dallas County.

The yard, which opened in September, is the largest built in half a decade by Omaha-based railroad giant Union Pacific Railroad Co. (NYSE: UNP). Allen saw in the UP yard his own vision for a major D-FW logistics hub. The Allen Group jumped at the opportunity, working under the radar over the past two years assembling some 5,000 acres in as many as 50 parcels.

With the goal of being a major player in southern Dallas County, The Allen Group’s Dallas Logistics Hub now spans Interstate 45 and the small, but growing, cities of Wilmer, Hutchins and Lancaster in Dallas County.

The Allen Group has been closing on various parcels of land over the past few months. The remaining tracts are set to close by mid-March, according to Dan McAuliffe, a long-time commercial real estate professional in North Texas who was named by The Allen Group in January to manage the Dallas operation.

“We expect to announce a build-to-suit before the end of the year,” he said. “We’re entertaining several users right now.”

The Allen Group specializes in what the company describes as high-end office and industrial real estate. The Dallas Logistics Hub will house major distribution centers, warehouses and rail-served facilities, as well as a hotel and truck stop with amenities.

Edward Romanov, president of The Allen Group, has said the southern Dallas region is an “exceptionally good” opportunity to site a park, given the massive movement of ocean freight into Houston and up Interstate 45 through Dallas-Fort Worth for distribution throughout the rest of the country.