Monthly Archives: October 2006

The Allen Group Recognized for Contribution to Economic Development

The Allen Group Recognized for Contribution to Economic Development

Dallas, Texas (October 28, 2006)— The Allen Group, a major developer of industrial and office properties across the United States, received an Award of Merit during the Greater Dallas Chamber annual Momentum Awards ceremony on October 26, 2006. The Awards are designed to celebrate companies who have relocated, expanded or fostered positive economic momentum in the Dallas-Fort Worth region.

The Allen Group received the award based on their commitment to Dallas and involvement in the communities surrounding the development of The Dallas Logistics Hub. The Dallas Hub is a collaborative effort between The Allen Group and the communities of Dallas, Lancaster, Wilmer and Hutchins, Texas.

Also a factor in the Award was The Allen Group’s history of creating employment, educational opportunities and resources within the communities in which its projects are located. As with previous developments, The Allen Group is committed to working with local and minority-owned firms and encouraging area businesses to participate in the development project, contributing to the overall economic growth of their communities. The Dallas Hub will have a significant, positive impact on the surrounding communities with the Project estimated to create a real property tax base of more than $2.5 billion while generating 30,000 direct jobs.

“We are honored to receive this recognition from a strong partner in the Greater Dallas Chamber and we are pleased they chose to recognize our commitment to be a responsible corporate citizen and neighbor in Southern Dallas County and the Metroplex,” said Leslie Jutzi, Director of Governmental Affairs and Community Relations for The Allen Group. “We look forward to continuing to drive economic growth in the area through significant contributions and projects, such as the Dallas Logistics Hub.”

This was the fourth year for the Momentum Awards, which were sponsored by Holmes, Murphy and Associates and The Dallas Morning News. Awards were also presented in other categories, including Employment Growth, and Corporate Relocation. For more information on the Greater Dallas Chamber and the Momentum Awards, please visit www.dallaschamber.org

A Grand Plan for Growth Lancaster: $300 million community would bring parks, posh homes

The Dallas Morning News

A Grand Plan for Growth Lancaster: $300 Million Community Would Bring Parks, Posh Homes

20 October 2006

Lancaster’s development boom may soon become an explosion.

Lancaster Preserve LP has announced plans to build a 766-acre mixed-use community in the southern portion of the city that eventually could attract as many as 8,000 new residents.

The $300 million project, called The Preserve, would include a town center, private parks, a senior citizen community and custom homes, including some that would cost around $1 million.

Although work could start in early 2007, pending approval from city officials, the development would be phased in over 10 years. Close to 2,500 housing units could ultimately be included in The Preserve, which developers tout as the first mixed-use development of this magnitude in southern Dallas County.

“It’s going to have a tremendous impact on the city when it’s built out,” said Lancaster Mayor Joe Tillotson. “It will certainly bring something we’ve needed, in the form of high-end housing.”

The Preserve plans come on the heels of The Allen Group’s development of a 6,000-acre Dallas Logistics Hub, which is scheduled to break ground this year, and the Union Pacific Corp. intermodal rail terminal, which began operations in 2005.

Steve Topletz, general partner for Lancaster Preserve, said plans for The Preserve would complement those two major projects. “The city of Lancaster has been working with us hand-in-glove in the zoning process and everything else to make sure everyone is in agreement,” Mr. Topletz said.

Plans for The Preserve are being considered by the city’s Planning and Zoning Commission, which held a public hearing in September and continues to have workshops on the proposal.

The commission’s next work session is scheduled for 7 p.m. Tuesday at the James R. Williams Pump Station, 1999 Jefferson St. If approved by that board, the project would go before the City Council for final approval.

Last year, Mr. Topletz sued the city in a dispute involving an unrelated residential project in which he wanted to place utility poles above ground. The city rejected his request, but a district judge eventually ruled in Mr. Topletz’s favor.

So far, there have been no major roadblocks for the current development – which would be on rolling wooded land between Interstates 35 and 45. He said the idea for The Preserve came from a need for a new type of mixed-use housing development.

“We were approached by business people in the community who literally work here every day but don’t live here,” Mr. Topletz said. “We needed to do some homework in this regard.”

What the developer determined was that Lancaster has been underserved in terms of residential development, especially for homes costing between $400,000 and $1 million. The initial phase of The Preserve will be a gated enclave with homes starting at $500,000.

Despite the support of city officials and many residents, the project is not without opposition. Wendell Prince, who lives near the project site, said he is worried about water runoff and potential flooding that such a massive development might cause.

“You’re talking about hundreds of acres of cement being put on top of land that is now agriculture land,” Mr. Prince said.

Romeo Lewis, who has lived in the area for 15 years, said the plans call for a shopping area and supermarket directly across from his home. “Like anybody else, I really don’t want that at my front door.”

“My major concern is the type of development they are portraying are things like senior citizens housing and a gated community and all that,”

Dr. Lewis said. “But once they get the zoning they want, are they going to do pretty much what they want?”

 Dr. Lewis said he knows development is going to come to his area of Lancaster sooner or later. He just hopes some of the rural character that makes the land so attractive is preserved.

But Terry Stinson, a lifelong resident of Lancaster, said he does not believe the new development would be detrimental to the community of about 33,000 people.

“I think it’d be a positive thing for the city,” said Mr. Stinson, a former City Council member. “I think people investing money in our community is a good thing.”

He also said that Lancaster’s location – about 15 miles south of downtown Dallas and between three interstate highways – makes it a prime spot for development.

“Obviously it’s not going to stay rural forever,” Mr. Stinson said. “It’s just a matter of trying to do the best we can for the area.”

BNSF Expands Intermodal Network

TrafficWorld

BNSF Expands Intermodal Network

18 October 2006

Two new agreements this week will give Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railway expanded intermodal capacity and a more efficientmeans of handling intermodal chassis.

A new logistics park near Kansas City, Mo., and a domestic chassis pool agreement for all BNSF domestic terminals are expected to streamline transportation’s fastest growing sector.

The Allen Group, a major developer of logistics parks and office properties throughout the United States, and BNSF Railway will develop a new logistics park near Gardner, Kansas, 25 miles southwest of Kansas City, Mo. The 1,000 acre logistics park will be adjacent to I-35 and BNSF’s Transcontinental mainline. Approximately 350 acres will be designated for a new BNSF Intermodal Facility with the remaining acreage dedicated for warehouse and distribution facilities by The Allen Group. The site is expected to be operational by 2008.

“As a result of the increase of trade with the Pacific Rim nations, rail movement and intermodal development has become a vital component in the international supply chain,” said Edward Romanov, President and COO of The Allen Group.

Interpool signed a ten-year agreement to manage domestic chassis pools and supply future chassis at all BNSF terminals handling domestic shipping containers. Under the agreement, Interpool will supply approximately 24,000 48′ and 53′ chassis that it owns or operates to BNSF customers, including truckload motor carriers and intermodal marketing companies. Lease agreements will be directly with customers. Interpool will manage the supply, flow and maintenance of domestic chassis in the BNSF pool system.

“We are pleased to be given this opportunity by BNSF which we feel will improve the speed and efficiency of domestic containerized cargo transport and help lower costs to our shippers, consignees, and the U.S. consumer,” said Martin Tuchman, Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of Interpool.

Midwestern Industrial Park Announced

National Real Estate Investor

Midwestern Industrial Park Announced

18 October 2006

Plans were announced this week to develop a 1,000-acre logistics park 25 miles southwest of Kansas City. The Allen Group, anational developer of logistics parks and office properties, will work with joint venture partner BNSF Railway Co. (NYSE: BNF) on the logistics park. A dollar amount on the total project cost was not disclosed. Roughly 350 acres of the site will also be cordoned off for a new BNSF Intermodal Facility. BNSF, one of the nation’s largest freight carriers, will develop and operate this new intermodal facility. Intermodals serve as hubs for the loading and unloading of shipping containers between truck and rail modes of transportation. “BNSF Railway and The Allen Group have a long-term working relationship and we are pleased with the confidence they have demonstrated in our company,” says Richard Allen, CEO of The Allen Group.

“We look forward to partnering with BNSF to create a major economic engine for jobs and new development in the region.” The Allen Group has developed more than $1 billion in projects nationwide. Both the intermodal facility and logistics park are expected to be finished late next year.

BNSF Names Developer for Gardner Hub; The Allen Group of San Diego

The Kansas City Star

BNSF Names Developer for Gardner Hub; The Allen Group of San Diego will Help Attract Tenants to a 1,000-Acre Development

17 October 2006

BNSF Railway Co. has found a partner to develop a rail-truck freight center near Gardner.

The Allen Group , a San Diego-based industrial development firm, has an agreement with BNSF to develop the proposed 1,000-acre logistics hub, the railroad said Monday.

The railroad and the Allen Group will work to develop and draw tenants to the facility, which is expected to be operational by late 2008. BNSF said it had purchased nearly 800 acres for the hub and had options to buy the rest of the property.

Upon receiving approvals from public authorities, BNSF said it expected construction to begin next year.

The Allen Group specializes in developing rail-served industrial parks and office properties. The logistics hub envisioned by BNSF near Gardner is similar to hubs the railroad operates near Chicago and Fort Worth. The intermodal hub, in which goods are transported by truck and rail, is surrounded by warehouses and distribution centers.

“We believe the Allen Group has the development skills and experience to help a new BNSF Logistics Park put the Kansas City region on the international map,” said Vann Cunningham, BNSF’s assistant vice president of economic development, in a statement. BNSF’s rail-truck intermodal hub will occupy about 350 acres with the remaining 650 acres being developed by the Allen Group for warehouses and distribution centers.

Edward Romanov, the development firm’s president and chief operating officer, said the hub will become a key component of freight movement from one U.S. coast to the other.

“As a result of the increase of trade with the Pacific Rim nations, rail movement and intermodal development has become a vital component of the international supply chain,” he said in a statement.

Matt Rose, chairman and chief executive of BNSF Railway, said in Lawrence last month that the proposed hub is expected to create 7,000 jobs directly and as many as 12,000 new jobs overall in Johnson County. The project’s total investment is expected to exceed $1 billion, including about $200 million by BNSF, according to Rose.

BNSF’s project is the Kansas City area’s second major freight hub proposal. The city of Kansas City last year sold the former Richards-Gebaur Airport to CenterPoint Realty Services Corp. to be redeveloped as an international inland port. That site, where Kansas City Southern has existing intermodal operations, also would try to attract manufacturing and retail tenants to establish warehouses and distribution centers.

BNSF’s proposed freight center is just outside Gardner’s western border. The project has drawn opposition from hundreds of area residents who fear that project would ruin the small-town atmosphere that they like about Gardner.

They forced the city to schedule an election Nov. 7 to decide whether it should be allowed to annex the hub. They hope that by rejecting annexation they can rely on the county to deny any zoning that BNSF needs.

Railway Picks Project Partner

Lawrence Journal-World

Railway Picks Project Partner

17 October 2006

Oct. 17–Burlington Northern Santa Fe’s new 1,000-acre logistics park will be developed by a San Diego company with a little bit of experience.

Try a 6,000-acre complex near Dallas.

The Allen Group emerged Monday as the winner in a competition to develop and provide master-planning services for BNSF Railway Co.’s planned new logistics park near Gardner, a community southeast of Lawrence just across the Johnson County line.

The Gardner project will be expected to draw contractors from Lawrence, plus other workers in future years as the park fills out with an estimated 12 million square feet of warehouse space.

The project will be on top of a 6,000-acre project The Allen Group already has going south of Dallas, to make room for 60 million square feet of warehouses spanning four communities.

Driving demand: trade with Pacific Rim countries, whose products are shipped into the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, then taken by rail to hubs for transfer onto trucks and delivery to stores throughout the Midwest, South and East Coast.

The project should help “put the Kansas City region on the international map,” said Vann Cunningham, the railway’s assistant vice president for economic development.

The Gardner center would be on BNSF’s main line that connects Southern California to Chicago, where the railroad already has a 2,500-acre logistics complex.

“We are confident that the Kansas City logistics hub will be recognized as the heart of the coast-to-coast rail corridor,” said Edward Romanov, president and chief operating officer for The Allen Group.

Fred Sherman, a former Lawrence city planner who now works as community development director of Gardner, said that The Allen Group’s experience working in California — it has two intermodal parks in the state, including one with a 1.7 million-square-foot warehouse for Target Corp. — could come in handy.

“They will bring a level of expertise in terms of community involvement and community referendum votes that maybe some area developer groups are not used to,” he said.

Gardner voters will decide Nov. 7 whether the city should annex 1,000 acres planned for the railway project. The company plans to proceed with its Kansas plans no matter what happens during the election, said Matt Rose, BNSF’s chairman and chief executive officer, during a visit to Kansas University last month.

BNSF Picks Development Partner for Intermodal Hub Near Gardner

The Kansas City Star

BNSF Picks Development Partner for Intermodal Hub Near Gardner

16 October 2006

BNSF Railway Co. has found a partner to develop a massive, rail-truck freight center near Gardner.

The Allen Group , a San Diego-based industrial development firm, has entered into an agreement with BNSF to develop the proposed 1,000-acre logistics hub, the railroad said today.

The railroad and The Allen Group will work to develop and draw tenants to the facility, which is expected to be operational by late 2008. BNSF said it has already purchased nearly 800 acres for the hub and has options to buy the rest of the property.

Upon receiving approvals from public authorities, BNSF said it expected construction of the facility to begin next year.

The Allen Group specializes in developing rail-served industrial parks and office properties. The logistics hub envisioned by BNSF near Gardner is similar to hubs the railroad operates near Chicago and Fort Worth. The intermodal hub, in which goods are transported by truck and rail, is surrounded by warehouses and distribution centers, creating shipping efficiencies.

“We believe The Allen Group has the development skills and experience to help a new BNSF Logistics Park put the Kansas City region on the international map,” Vann Cunningham, BNSF’s assistant vice president of economic development, said in a statement.

Matt Rose, chairman and chief executive of BNSF Railway, said in Lawrence last month that the proposed hub is expected to create 7,000 jobs directly and as many as 12,000 new jobs overall in Johnson County. The project’s total investment is expected to exceed $1 billion, including about $200 million by BNSF, according to Rose.

On Nov. 7, Gardner residents will vote on whether to annex the property where the logistics hub is planned. While Rose has said BNSF hopes an annexation is approved, the railroad plans on proceeding with the project regardless of the vote’s outcome.

The Star’s Brad Cooper contributed to this report.

The Allen Group and BNSF Railway Announce New Partnership to Develop an Intermodal Logistics Park near Kansas City

The Allen Group and BNSF Railway Announce New Partnership to Develop an Intermodal Logistics Park near Kansas City

San Diego, California (October 16, 2006) — The Allen Group, a major developer of logistics parks and office properties throughout the United States, and the BNSF Railway Company (NYSE; BNI) today announced a joint agreement to develop a new logistics park located near Gardner, Kansas, 25 miles southwest of Kansas City.

The two companies will master-plan a 1,000 acre logistics park, adjacent to I-35 and BNSF’s Transcontinental mainline. Approximately 350 acres will be designated for a new BNSF Intermodal Facility with the remaining acreage dedicated for warehouse and distribution facilities by The Allen Group.

BNSF Railway, one of the nation’s largest freight carriers with extensive experience in the development and operation of rail intermodals, will develop and operate this new state of the art facility. Intermodals serve as hubs for the loading and unloading of shipping containers between truck and rail modes of transportation. The intermodal facility is expected to be operational by late 2008.

“BNSF Railway and The Allen Group have a long term working relationship and we are pleased with the confidence they have demonstrated in our Company,” said Richard Allen, CEO of The Allen Group. “We look forward to partnering with BNSF to create a major economic engine for jobs and new development in the region.”

“After a national search and review process, we selected The Allen Group for their knowledge, experience and track record in developing these national logistics hubs,” said Vann Cunningham, BNSF’s Assistant Vice President of Economic Development.

“We are confident that the Kansas City Logistics Hub will be recognized as the heart of the coast to coast rail corridor,” said Edward Romanov, President and COO of The Allen Group. “As a result of the increase of trade with the Pacific Rim nations, rail movement and intermodal development has become a vital component in the international supply chain.”

Railroad Renaissance

National Real Estate Investors

Railroad Renaissance

1 October 2006

The surging flow of imports to U.S. consumers is fueling a boom in the century-old railroad industry, and savvy real estate investors are already laying tracks for growth along newly flourishing supply routes. From Dallas to Columbus, rail service is driving millions of square feet in distribution center development.

Impelled by ravenous consumer demand for inexpensive merchandise, the volume of containerized goods imported to the United States mushroomed 140% in the past decade, from 48 million tons in 1994 to 120 million tons in 2004. That volume has boosted demand for rail service to unprecedented levels.

Intermodal freight, or the shipping containers and trailers conveyed by multiple transportation modes, are a lucrative business for the railroads. Intermodal shipments on U.S. trains last year constituted a little more than 6% of total tonnage yet provided nearly 15% of revenue, or about $7 billion, for the nation’s major railroad companies.

Intermodal freight recently surpassed coal as the greatest revenue maker for rail operators, so it’s little wonder that railroads are scrambling to expand capacity in order to move more containers. BNSF Railway devoted $400 million of its $2.6 billion capital program this year to expanding capacity, laying 32 miles of double track and 8 miles of triple track on sections of its main line between Chicago and the Ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach.

Double tracking, or adding a second track, enables two trains to pass each other without requiring one to pull onto a siding. Union Pacific is adding more than 50 miles of track alongside its main line between Los Angeles and El Paso this year, part of an ongoing effort to double track that entire 750-mile run.

In the Northeast, Norfolk Southern is spending $250 million — including $150 million in government funds — to raise tunnel and bridge clearances between ports at Norfolk, Va. and Columbus, Ohio. The new clearances will enable trains on the company’s Heartland Corridor route to carry double-stacked shipping containers, dramatically increasing capacity on the line.

Expansion is a welcome change for an industry that was in decline a generation ago, according to rail expert Ken Withers, an engineer and vice president of R.L. Banks & Associates in Washington, D.C. Unable to set their own pricing or abandon unprofitable routes without federal approval, most major railroads were bankrupt by the mid-1970s.

Deregulated along with the trucking industry in 1980, however, the major railroad companies emphasize efficiency and have largely shed or spun off low-volume routes. “They want the unit trains of 100 cars or more, and they want to go to a distant place,” Withers says. “That’s their most productive move, and therefore their best profit producer.”

Now that railroads are adding capacity, what does that mean for real estate investors? In a word, opportunity, according to Will Friedman, vice president of supply chain and intermodal real estate at Duke Realty Corp. “Real estate is going to follow rail hubs,” he says.

“Railroads are putting billions of dollars into their main lines, and that opens the door for developers to set up shop on these rail superhighways,” Friedman says. “For industrial developers, the last five years has been an awakening, the realization that this is the new frontier.”

Development a la Mode

Duke is betting on railroads in a big way. Late last year, the publicly traded REIT and its investment partner Capital Square Ltd. launched Rickenbacker Global Logistics Park, a 1,200-acre industrial project adjacent to Rickenbacker International Airport in Columbus, Ohio.

Then in May, Duke and Indianapolis-based developer Browning Investments Inc. formed a joint venture to develop AllPoints Midwest and AllPoints Anson, which together total 1,500 acres and could yield 20 million sq. ft. of industrial space near Indianapolis.

Both Rickenbacker and AllPoints are based in large part on proximity to intermodal rail yards, which are specially equipped to quickly transfer shipping containers from trains to truck trailers. The parks are already garnering tenant interest.

Duke kicked off the Rickenbacker project by launching a 572,000 sq. ft. speculative industrial building last December. By February, logistics provider Exel Inc. had leased the entire space. The developer has already announced plans to expand that first phase with an additional 624,000 sq. ft. of spec development.

Even some railroad companies hope to tap the real estate potential generated by intermodal yards, acquiring land on their own and then seeking fee developers to oversee their projects. Examples include a Union Pacific project in San Antonio and a BNSF development in Kansas City. Railroad owner CSX Corp., meanwhile, is developing an industrial park around its intermodal yard in Winter Haven, Fla.

Texas Firsts

Many of the industrial parks under development around the nation are patterned after AllianceTexas, believed to be the first massive real estate development built around an intermodal facility. Ross Perot Jr.’s real estate company, Hillwood, began the 11,600-acre industrial portion of AllianceTexas in 1989 as part of a larger mixed-use project north of Fort Worth, Texas. The park is home to more than 140 tenants spanning in excess of 25 million sq. ft.

AllianceTexas offers traditional rail access to some buildings via spurs into the park, and car maker Hyundai unloads automobiles from trains on the Union Pacific line at the eastern end of the complex. The real engine behind AllianceTexas’ success, however, is a 289-acre intermodal yard that handles about 600,000 containers annually, according to Hillwood spokesman David Pelletier.

“The BNSF intermodal yard is probably the single most important factor in the growth of AllianceTexas and is what truly makes it a logistics hub,” Pelletier says. “We just completed two land sales and two tenant expansions in the past month that were all done because of the intermodal yard and its connection for imports from Asia.”

Some 50 miles to the southeast, another project may soon steal the spotlight for state-of-the-art integration of real estate with intermodal access. The Dallas Logistics Hub is a 6,000-acre project launched by San Diego-based developer The Allen Group, and features the newest intermodal yard in the nation. In addition to the existing yard, owned by Union Pacific, the developer is in talks with BNSF to open a second intermodal facility within the park. If successful, Dallas Logistics Hub would be the only park in the world with intermodal access to more than one carrier.

The Allen Group plans to develop the $2.5 billion project over the next 20 years, delivering as much as 60 million sq. ft. of commercial space, according to Ed Romanov, the company’s CEO. “This is the future of the industrial business in this country,” he says.

Warning Signals

There are pitfalls to avoid in rail-oriented development. Railroads are a high-volume business, so a new project must be capable of generating tremendous freight volumes in order to convince a railroad to establish a new intermodal yard. The best places to generate those volumes are at the end of a lengthy route, or where intermodal freight is transferred from one railroad company’s lines to another to continue a cross-country journey.

BNSF won’t consider opening a new intermodal facility for fewer than 250,000 container lifts per year, according to Vann Cunningham, assistant vice president of development at BNSF. “Most communities will never have the volume they need for an intermodal yard,” Cunningham says.

Places where goods are transferred from trains to trucks or another transportation medium are likely candidates for large-scale development, says John Carver, executive director of the Colliers Multi-Modal Services Group in Los Angeles. “Wherever the forms of transportation cross, somebody has to touch that cargo, and that’s where it makes sense to build your real estate infrastructure,” he says. “The opportunities are at the crossing points.”

While most users need truck bays to receive containers and trailers, some want the low cost and greater efficiency of direct boxcar access from a rail spur to the building. Tenants that deal in paper, building materials or other bulk commodities may favor this method, known as carload service, explains Neil Doyle, senior vice president of development at Centerpoint Properties. “You can fit three to five semi-trailer loads in a box car, so it’s very efficient if you’re not pressed for time.”

Extending a rail spur to a building requires a flat grade and enough track to clear the main line. Spurs range from 200 feet to a half mile and may cost $100,000 to $500,000 to construct, says Craig Engelhardt, managing director at tenant representation firm Studley in Rochelle Park, N.J.

The critical selling point to companies receiving containerized goods, however, is proximity to an intermodal yard, port, or the customer. “If the port is the source and the customer is the destination, you want the distribution center close to one of those and not somewhere between them,” Engelhardt says.

How long will rail traffic drive real estate development? Friedman of Duke Realty expects the demand for distribution space at ports and rail hubs to remain strong through the next decade and beyond, due to the nation’s reliance on imported consumer goods.

Trucking companies plagued by driver shortages and increasing costs for fuel and equipment may cut back services, says Friedman, forcing more companies to consider rail as an alternative. “This railroad renaissance is going to be our world for the foreseeable future.”

Matt Hudgins is an Austin-based writer.

Distribution Centers: The Closer, the Better

When Wal-Mart Stores Inc. was deliberating where to place a distribution center to serve the Chicago area, Centerpoint Intermodal Center in Ellwood, Ill. was among the more expensive options. Yet that’s where the company is now building its 3.4 million sq. ft. facility.

Why? In short, developer Centerpoint Properties was able to demonstrate how the retail giant would realize $12 million to $16 million in annual savings by hauling its shipping containers from a nearby rail yard to a distribution center within the park, rather than to less expensive sites 10 or 20 miles away.

Wal-Mart will receive about 100,000 containers annually at Centerpoint Intermodal Center, says Neil Doyle, senior vice president of development at Centerpoint based in Oak Brook, Ill. “I’m sure there was cheaper land available elsewhere in the Chicago area, but the annual transportation savings will pay that [additional cost] off in a year or two.”

At Centerpoint Intermodal Center, tenants spend about $40 per container for drayage, a term for trucking a container from a port or rail yard to a distribution center. That figure compares favorably with drayage costs of $200 to $300 per container to less expensive warehouse locations 20 or 30 miles away, Doyle says.

Minimizing drayage costs is the greatest value developers can offer in a rail-served logistics park, Doyle says. The higher cost of real estate near a port or intermodal facility pales in comparison with the high operating costs associated with a lengthy drayage run. “You can’t be penny wise and dollar foolish,” he says.

Drayage costs vary widely depending on the distance traveled. Drayage from the Port of Los Angeles to the Los Angeles suburb of Compton is $155 per container, compared with $300 from the port to San Bernardino, says Craig Engelhardt, a managing director at tenant representation firm Studley in Rochelle Park, N.J.

Efficient use of labor is another advantage of close proximity to the rail hub, and is related to drayage costs. A large retail distributor may receive dozens of shipping containers on a single train, and is responsible for picking up those goods quickly to make way for new shipments arriving. After 24 hours, most railroads charge $200 or more for each day a container remains in the yard.

A lengthy drive to the distribution center may require the use of 20 or 30 drivers for several days to move a large number of containers. A short drayage run to a distribution center adjacent to the intermodal yard, on the other hand, enables a handful of employees to clear the same number of containers in an equal amount of time or less, and with less equipment. — Matt Hudgins