Monthly Archives: May 2006

Lancaster in Golden Rectangle

Focus Daily News

Lancaster in Golden Rectangle

May 3, 2006

“We’re in the Golden Triangle,” Lancaster Chamber President Joe Johnson said Thursday when introducing the economic development panel at the chamber’s monthly membership luncheon. The “Golden Triangle” lies within the boundaries of I-35, I-20, I 45, and the future Loop 9. It is located along the east historic NAFTA Trade Corridor and is west of the proposed Trans-Texas 35.

The economic development panel consisted of Dan McAuliffe, Gary Anderson, and C.E. Doc Cornutt.

McAuliffe was recently named the Allen Group’s Vice President of Development to manage the daily operations of the Dallas Logistics Hub. In 1998, McAuliffe led the design and creation of RailPort, a 1,700 acre, dual rail served industrial development south of the Dallas-Fort Worth Metroplex. From 1998 through 2005, he coordinated the construction of more than $60 million of public infrastructure and rail facilities for RailPort.

Anderson, Managing Director, ProLogis, is responsible for capital deployment and development in the Central Region, comprising Texas, Oklahoma and Missouri, and in the Mexico Region, comprising Monterrey, Juarez, Reynosa and Tijuana. Prior to his current position, Anderson held Market Officer responsibilities in New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Washington and Oregon, and for the western Mexico cities of Tijuana and Juarez. He also had responsibility for developing ProLogis’ global expansion strategy.

Cornutt serves as Chairman and CEO of Argent Property Company, an organization he founded in 1997 in partnership with an affiliate of Hunt Realty Corporation in Dallas, leading that organization in developing and investing in strategically located business/industrial parks, industrial properties and industrial portfolio companies.

All three me Cornutt said that the reality of the University of North Texas Dallas campus, the development of the Port of Dallas, and the construction of the I-20 service road create retail and commercial development opportunities along I-20.

Lancaster’s Campus District north of I-20 proposes mixed multifamily residential with retail outlets to service the UNT Dallas community.

McAuliffe said that the Dallas Logistics Hub project, between the Lancaster Airport and the Union Pacific Intermodal Facility in Wilmer and Hutchins began about two years ago when Allen Group founder and CEO bought 2,500 acres.

“He caught the fever,” McAuliffe laughed. “We’ll soon have about 6,000 acres.” He said that the development will be a long process, with a projected 30-year build-out. “It’s going to take teamwork and cooperation. We have to deal with four different cities and four different master plans.”

The Logistics Hub will eventually have $2.7 billion in assessed value to add to the tax rolls, and will eventually create 35,000 new jobs.

Anderson said that ProLogis’ is developing a 204-acre, $100 million, 3.1 million square foot distribution campus at Interstate 20 and Houston School Road in Lancaster.

The NAFTA Trade Corridor was given a Congressional High Priority Corridor designation for the Dallas NAFTA Trade Corridor was achieved in the surface transportation reauthorization bill signed by the President in July 2005 and will increase the amount of amount of federal funding for this trade corridor.

The DNTC is the result of the efforts by the River of Trade Corridor Coalition (ROTCC), which was created by Dallas to combat the Texas Trade Corridor 35, which will bypass Dallas. ROTCC currently includes more than 40 members along the NAFTA trade route, including members in Arkansas and Tennessee.

The ROTCC Congressional Caucus was also created and now includes and now includes 10 members of Congress whose districts encompass the NAFTA Trade route and who were effective in achieving the Congressional High Prior Congressional High Priority Corridor designation.

The Allen Group Completes New 288,000 Sq. Ft. Spec Building at ITTC

The Allen Group Completes New 288,000 Sq. Ft. Spec Building at ITTC

SAN DIEGO (May 2, 2006) The Allen Group, with offices in San Diego, Visalia and Bakersfield, Calif., as well as Dallas, Texas, is trusted by Fortune 500 companies such as VF Corporation, Cox Communications, FedEx, The Allen Group, a major developer of office and industrial properties, including rail-served distribution and logistics parks, announced that it has completed construction of a new building now available for occupancy at the International Trade and Transportation Center (ITTC). The ITTC, developed by The Allen Group, is a 700-acre master-planned logistics park strategically located in the Southern San Joaquin Valley of California. It has been designated as a Foreign Trade Zone and is affiliated with the ports of L.A. and Long Beach.

The new 288,000 square foot building has been designed for dock-side rail service and features concrete-tilt construction, 48 in. dock height doors (9ft x 10ft), a panelized roof system, 1% skylight coverage (in warehouse areas), and parapets on all sides. The architect was Teter A&E (Fresno), and Wallace & Smith (Bakersfield) was the general contractor.

More than 35,000,000 consumers live within a 300-mile radius of the International Trade and Transportation Center. Retailer Target Corporation operates a 1.7-million square foot warehouse and distribution center at the ITTC. Among the ITTC’s other users are Hillman Fasteners and State Farm Insurance.

Located at 7th Standard Road and Zachary Drive in Shafter near Bakersfield, California, the ITTC is served by the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway, provides easy access to California’s main north-south and east-west intrastate truck routes Interstate 5 and Highway 99, and is in proximity to the new terminal at the Bakersfield airport. Southern San Joaquin Valley, including the ITTC, has emerged as an attractive alternative to the Inland Empire and other more mature markets for the location of distribution and logistics centers. The region offers a lower cost of doing business, access to a large labor pool, and proximity to affordable housing.

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.

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 visit www.allengroup.com.

Richard Allen Speaks at USC’s Lusk Center Event on Industrial Real Estate and Logistics

Richard Allen Speaks at USC’s Lusk Center Event on Industrial Real Estate and Logistics

SAN DIEGO, CA (May 2, 2006) — Accelerating global trade, particularly between the United States and Asia, is increasing demand for multi-modal logistics hubs in America, said Richard S. Allen, Chief Executive Officer of The Allen Group, at a University of Southern California Lusk Center for Real Estate event held today in Santa Barbara.

Mr. Allen’s comments came during the fifth “Lusk100 Annual Retreat” of senior industry leaders from across California and the nation. The retreat provides a forum for discussion and analysis of real estate markets and regulatory and other issues.

Given The Allen Group’s specialization in developing rail-served industrial parks, particularly in Texas and California, home to some of the busiest ports in the U.S., Richard Allen was invited to address the impact of global trade on real estate. Other speakers at the event included industry icon Sam Zell, Chairman of Equity Group Investments, LLC.

Mr. Allen’s remarks focused on how global trade acceleration is affecting demand patterns for industrial real estate in the U.S., including demand for high-tech, big-box, multi-modal distribution facilities in close proximity to ports.

“The volume of shipments through West Coast ports is higher than it’s ever been,” Allen said, “and the pattern is likely to continue as globalization matures. In this environment, manufacturers, distributors and retailers rely on increasingly sophisticated logistics centers and transportation partners to move goods efficiently through the U.S. To be in the industrial real estate business today is to be in the logistics business, the automation business, the transportation planning business, and the foreign-trade law business, among others.”