Monthly Archives: June 2007

Allen Group Hires Engineering Director

The Kansas City Star

Allen Group Hires Engineering Director

June 29, 2007

The Allen Group, developer of the KC Logistics Park intermodal facility near Gardner, has named Patrick Robinson the director of engineering for Allen Development of Kansas.

Robinson will assist with the management, coordination and development of public and private infrastructure improvements in and around The Allen Group developments in the Kansas City area. His primary focus will be to coordinate and supervise land development activities, consultants, contractors, project schedules, budget administration and construction associated with the nearly 1,000-acre KC Logistics Park.

“We are very pleased to have Patrick join the team in Kansas City,” Allen Development of Kansas President William Crandall said. “His wealth of experience in commercial real estate and financing of public infrastructure improvements will be invaluable to the development of the KC Logistics Park, as well as the company as a whole.”

Prior to joining The Allen Group, Robinson served as land planning and entitlement manager for Pulte Homes, one of the nation’s largest house builders. During his time with Pulte Homes, he served as the primary point of contact with consultants and governmental agencies. Robinson’s experience includes entitlement approvals for more than 1,000 acres of commercial and residential land developments, land acquisition and disposal, and financing of public infrastructure improvements.

Robinson received a bachelor of science in civil engineering from the University of Missouri at Rolla. A registered professional engineer, he is a member of the American Public Works Association, the American Society of Civil Engineers and the Kansas City Area Development Council.

Patrick Robinson Joins The Allen Group as Director of Engineering for Allen Development of Kansas

Patrick Robinson Joins The Allen Group as Director of Engineering for Allen Development of Kansas

Kansas City, KS (June 28, 2007) — The Allen Group, a major developer of commercial properties across the United States, has named Patrick Robinson, Director of Engineering for Allen Development of Kansas.

In his new position, Robinson will assist with the management, coordination and development of public and private infrastructure improvements in and around The Allen Group developments in the Kansas City metropolitan area.  His primary focus will be to coordinate and supervise land development activities, consultants, contractors, project schedules, budget administration and construction associated with the KC Logistics Park.

“We are very pleased to have Patrick join the team in Kansas City,” said William Crandall, President of Allen Development of Kansas. “His wealth of experience in commercial real estate and financing of public infrastructure improvements will be invaluable to the development of the KC Logistics Park, as well as the Company as a whole.”

Prior to joining The Allen Group, Robinson served as Land Planning and Entitlement Manager for Pulte Homes, one of the nation’s largest homebuilders.  During his time with Pulte Homes, he served as the primary point of contact with consultants and governmental agencies.  Robinson’s experience includes entitlement approvals for more than 1,000 acres of commercial and residential land developments, land acquisition and disposal, and financing of public infrastructure improvements.

Robinson received a Bachelor of Science in Civil Engineering from the University of Missouri at Rolla. He is a registered Professional Engineer in the state of Kansas, and a member of the American Public Works Association, the American Society of Civil Engineers and the Kansas City Area Development Council.

For more information on The Allen Group or the KC Logistics Park, log on towww.allengroup.com.

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*Editor’s note:  A high resolution photo of Patrick Robinson is available upon request.

Kansas CityLogistics Park
KC Logistics Park is a 1,000 acre intermodal-served logistics park situated at the gateway to America’s population.  Located in Gardner, Kansas, 25 miles southwest of Kansas City, KC  Logistics Park is the latest project to be developed by The Allen Group.  In the fall of 2006, BNSF Railway selected The Allen Group as their real estate development company of choice to develop the project for future distribution and warehouse facilities.  At full build-out, KC Logistics Park will have in excess of 7 million square feet of vertical development, creating over 13,000 new jobs and providing a $1.7 billion economic impact to the State of Kansas. 

The Allen Group
The Allen Group, one the nation’s fastest growing privately held commercial development firms, specializes in the development of high-end industrial, office, retail and mixed-use properties throughout the United States.  The Company’s major focus is the development of logistics parks — “inland ports” — that are situated adjacent to some of the most sophisticated rail, intermodal and highway infrastructure in the country. The Allen Group developed over one billion dollars in projects ranging in size up to 1.7 million square feet and currently has more than 8,000 acres under development across the United States.

The Allen Group is based in San Diego with regional offices in Visalia, Bakersfield (Calif.), Dallas and Kansas City. For more information about the Company, please visitwww.allengroup.com.

Crandall Rises to the Occasion for Tall Development Orders

Kansas City Business Journal

Crandall Rises to the Occasion for Tall Development Orders

June 25, 2007

Think through some of the metro area’s development headlines, and you’ll probably hit on one that real estate developer Bill Crandall had his hands in.

Highlights include the Sprint Corp. World Headquarters Campus and regional shopping draw Village West.

Now, the Kansas City native is helping San Diego based The Allen Group develop a logistics hub near Gardner — a project expected to bring thousands of jobs and billions of dollars in economic growth to Kansas and a job for which Crandall discontinued his year-and-a-half-old company.

Crandall said intellectually challenging projects draw him. Even when he’s had little or no related experience, he’s landed tall orders.

He attributes much of his success to teamwork, being in the right place at the right time and old fashioned hard work.

“The only place I’ll give myself a little credit is I had the courage to try,” he said. “I didn’t let the intimidation of the projects’ scale get to me — I get excited about projects of scale and capacity.”

But there’s more to it. Bob Marcusse, CEO of the Kansas City Area Development Council, helped point The Allen Group to Crandall.

“Bill is a very smart guy,” Marcusse said. “He has a proven track record. He is in the best sense of the word, very aggressive, and he’s a lot of fun. Any major developer needs to have a blend of technical capabilities, a drive to succeed and the social skills necessary to bring people through a complex process, and Bill really has brought all of those things together.”

Crandall, a firm believer that “you manufacture your own luck,” years ago determined not to let great opportunities slip by.

“I really feel like I wanted to take advantage of my life,” he said. “You’re only in this world in a productive capacity for 40 to 50 years, and I wanted to maximize that.” He started by setting lofty goals.

As a B and C student with two architecture degrees, Crandall set his sites on earning an MBA from the prestigious University of Chicago. “I knew I didn’t set the world on fire with my GPA,” he said.

So he threw all his efforts into perfecting the entrance essay and followed up by doggedly contacting people at the university until he had secured a spot. He later helped develop a $44 million education complex at the university. Subsequent pursuits mirror the same bulldog drive.

Crandall returned to Kansas City in 1995 and took a job with Zimmer Cos. Not long after, Sprint decided that it wanted to build a 4 million-square-foot, $1 billion headquarters in Overland Park. Zimmer, a firm of about 40 employees, had only two people — including Crandall — to take on managing construction of the project. To fill out its team, the company hired two more people with related expertise. Somehow, they won the project.

“It was daunting,” he said. “Now that I’ve caught it, what do I do?”

Ever learning on his feet, Crandall and the team delivered the mega park.

Then came an unprecedented opportunity, “a landmark project,” Crandall said. Having wagered $18 million to buy 400 acres for a project without prospects, the Unified Government of Wyandotte County/Kansas City, Kan. needed someone to make it pay off.

It was Crandall’s first attempt at retail development. His title: Master developer.

The project was a blank canvas.

“Sprint was a pure construction management project. We knew what they wanted — it was just a matter of handling it,” Crandall said. “With Village West, we didn’t know who the tenants would be or what they would need.”

While laying out and filling 2 million square feet of retail development, Crandall and his team piloted a tax incentive program through its maiden voyage.They negotiated with the Unified Government for $250 million in sales tax revenue bonds for the project. With more than $500 million in annual sales, the project is well on its way to repaying the bonds. It marked the first use of sales tax revenue bonds, or STAR bonds, which allow new taxes from a development to pay for related improvements that benefit the public.

“The intricacies and level of detail that were required for putting together the financing and project details for Village West were very complex,” said Dennis Hays, county administrator for the Unified Government. “Bill is very talented and learns quickly.”

With the Kansas City Logistics Hub, Crandall said he sought involvement because of the project’s “sheer benefit to the state.” The Gardner hub is on 1,000 acres, part of which BNSF Railway Co. is developing into an intermodal facility. The Allen Group gets almost 600 acres to build about 7 million square feet of speculative warehousing and distribution center space, a project that will cost about $250 million.

Again, Crandall had no experience in the industrial development world, yet Allen chose him in March to manage the job. Crandall closed Crandall Co., the real estate consulting firm he’d started with his wife, Laura Lee, and transferred on going projects to the new Allen office. Although the logistics hub will be the focus, Allen Development of Kansas also will pursue other area development projects of varying types — a caveat of Crandall’s employment.

“Each one of these people knew what they were getting,” he said. “I just jump in, take notes, be observant and listen to people helping manage the project.”

Eighty percent of the expertise the projects require involves the same underpinnings of land development, construction, finance and leading large consulting teams, he said.

They also offer one other thing.

“These projects are all doing good things for people,” Crandall said. “The project in Wyandotte County was substantial and put the place on the map. It’s the same for the Gardner.”

Bill Crandall Title: President, Allen Development of Kansas Age: 47 Family: Wife, Laura Lee; children: Sam, Will and Emma Education: Bachelor’s degrees in architecture and environmental design, University of Kansas; MBA, University of Chicago Hobbies: Golf; serves on board for The First Tee of Greater Kansas City.

Mega Distribution Projects Focus Locations on World Trade

American Journal of Transportation

Mega Distribution Projects Focus Locations on World Trade

June 11, 2007

Regardless of whether shipments are for an import or export warehouse, regional distribution center (DC), supplier, manufacturer, store network, or end-user, speed is the key.

Today customers demand that their distribution networks move products better, faster and cheaper. An optimum location for logistics operations is a must have.

In this regard, Texas has just become bigger. On April 13, 2007, the Dallas Logistics Hub was added to its stock. With over 6,000 acres master-planned for the development of 60 million vertical square feet of logistics and manufacturing space, the “Hub” is deemed the largest new logistics park under development in North America.

“It is strategically located to become an important intermodal site,” says Jon Cross, the marketing director for The Allen Group. Executives with The Allen Group, developers of the project, see the Hub as a key piece of the NAFTA infrastructure.

“We came to the Dallas Metroplex because of its potential for good freight movements and shipping routes,” explains Cross. “The project is being developed to take advantage of the coming improvements in the state’s transportation system.”

At the heart of those improvements is Loop 9, better known as the Trans-Texas Corridor (TTC). This proposed multi-billion dollar highway and rail corridor is currently planned to run along the South boundary of the Dallas Hub.

I-35, otherwise known as the NAFTA Trade Corridor, runs three miles West of the Dallas Hub and is planned to be part of the TTC. Already I-20, the primary East/West trucking corridor for the southern United States, borders the park’s North entrance. I-45, the direct interstate to the Port of Houston, is adjacent to the park’s East entrance.

The Port of Houston, which currently ranks first in the United States for foreign tonnage and is the sixth largest port in the world, will see an increase in traffic once the Panama Canal is widened to accommodate the larger steamship vessels traversing Pacific Rim trade routes. The Dallas Logistics Hub will be a key component for the port by operating as a major inland port bringing products by rail from the Gulf of Mexico and the Pacific for regional and national distribution.

A key component in that effort is the 360-acre Union Pacific Miller Intermodal facility that borders the Hub. With a 365,000 life capacity and 4,000 parking stalls, the facility more than doubles UP’s intermodal capacity.

“At full expansion, the facility will have a 600,000 lift capacity,” says Cross. Its’ Dallas Intermodal Terminal (DIT) provides quick access to the counties that comprise 97% of the Dallas metroplex population, and serves as the gateway for intermodal goods to the major population centers in the Central and Eastern United States.

A main feature of DIT is its 10-lane high-tech, biometric secured AGS (automated gate system) entrance.

Warehousing & Distribution – Kansas City Logistics Park Part of “Inland Port” Effort

American Journal of Transportation

Warehousing & Distribution – Kansas City Logistics Park Part of “Inland Port” Effort

June 11, 2007

Kansas City’s drive to become a major inland port for logistics and distribution centers kicked into a higher gear with Burlington Northern Sante Fe’s decision to build Logistics Park – Kansas City.

BNSF’s current intermodal facility in Kansas City handles about 400,000 containers a year.

“There are some distribution facilities near the intermodal area, but the entire area is developed so there is no room for new warehouses and distribution centers,” said Steve Forsberg, BNSF General Director Public Affairs. The railroad gained elbow room by purchasing land near Gardner, Kansas, about 25 miles southeast of Kansas City. Slightly less than 400 acres will be used for a new BNSF intermodal center. Last fall the railway picked The Allen Group to develop a 600-acre park for distribution and warehouse facilities around the intermodal area.

“The beauty is, that way the distribution centers are next to the intermodal area, which significantly reduces the initial trip,” said Forsberg. “It’s just a few blocks as opposed to a number of miles.”

The Logistics Park is part of a trend that has been going on for a decade and a half toward increasing intermodal container traffic on railways, according to Forsberg. “The fastest growing transportation sector in the nation is in intermodal rail,” he said. Rail transportation offers relatively good fuel economy and low costs, while trucks provide flexibility for picking up containers and delivering them. “Intermodal traffic harnesses the strengths of both types of transportation,” Forsberg said. BNSF is the largest rail intermodal carrier in the world, he said. Logistics Park – Kansas City is the company’s third logistics park.

BNSF and The Allen Group are now meeting with local officials to discuss possible incentives for the Park and public/private partnership. One subject being raised with the Kansas Department of Transportation is construction of a new freeway interchange near the Park. The developers are dangling some juicy carrots to get incentives. They include 13,000 new jobs, $330 million in property taxes for Gardner and $7.7 billion in new wages for the state of Kansas.

Talks are expected to last about a year, with construction starting in the Fall of 2008. “In the third quarter of 2009, BNSF will be online with the intermodal facility, and about the same time we will have our first distribution centers,” said William Crandall, president of Allen Development of Kansas. In the meantime, The Allen Group is talking with numerous potential occupants of the Logistics Park, including giant retailers like Wal-Mart and Target.

Though Far from the Coast, America’s ‘Inland Ports’ are making a run for a share of the booming U.S.-Asia trade

DC Velocity

Though Far from the Coast, America’s “Inland Ports” are Making a Run for a Share of the Booming U.S.-Asia Trade.

June 7, 2007

If you build it, they will come. The developers of the AllianceTexas distribution hub in North Fort Worth have already proved that. Since its founding in 1989, the 17,000-acre logistics complex has attracted more than 140 corporate tenants, including such heavy hitters as General Mills, Ford Motor Co., and Home Depot. Now, economic development officials in places like Dallas/Fort Worth and Kansas City are hoping that the Field of Dreams theory will hold up in their regions as well.

The “you” in this case are local development authorities and real estate developers—not just in Dallas and Kansas City, but also in San Antonio, Texas; Columbus, Ohio; and Nashville, Tenn.. The “it,” of course, are the vast logistics parks springing up in the nation’s mid-section. And “they” are importers—manufacturers and big box retailers that are displaying an apparently limitless appetite for distribution space.

What’s fueling the developers’ dreams is the booming U.S.-Asian trade, which has altered the traditional economics of importing. In an earlier era, the notion of “inland ports” would have seemed almost preposterous. The majority of Asian imports were handled at the vast distribution centers that grew up around the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach, through which most Asian goods entered the country. But mounting congestion problems at those ports have led big importers to seek alternatives. And more and more often, those alternatives include distribution hubs that are located far from any coast.

“The real driver is Asian trade,” says Rob Harrison, deputy director at the University of Texas’s Center for Transportation Research in Arlington. “As soon as that container growth started to occur, that offered the opportunity to develop a rail network of inland-based ports. We’re seeing them in all shapes and sizes.”

Texas Two-Step

Historically, North American logistics complexes have grown up around commercial airports. AllianceTexas, for example, sprang up on the acreage surrounding the all-cargo Fort Worth Alliance Airport, which opened in 1989. As global trade boomed, however, it became clear that the real draw was not easy air access, but the complex’s considerable intermodal handling capabilities. Along with the industrial airport, the site today boasts access to two rail lines, an intermodal terminal, a Foreign Trade Zone, and an on-site customs station.

Taken together, AllianceTexas’s facilities and its proximity to exploding population centers in the South and East proved irresistible to a number of national players. “The thing that really helped Alliance take off was when the boxes started to arrive from Asia and were processed at that site for a very large metropolitan area,” says Harrison.

Most of the goods arriving at AllianceTexas today originate in Asia and enter the United States through Los Angeles-Long Beach, where they move by rail (via the Burlington Northern Santa Fe) to the intermodal yard at Alliance. From there, imports can be whisked to nearby DCs, many of which are located right on site. The intermodal yard currently handles about 600,000 lifts per year, but its capacity will be expanded to 1 million lifts within three years.

There were some growing pains in the early years. For example, as business boomed, a labor shortage developed. The complex’s developer, Hillman, expanded the development to include affordable housing for workers employed at the site as well as retail stores to serve them. Today, AllianceTexas employs 24,000 full-time workers, and construction of additional housing is under way. The complex is currently only 40 percent built out, leaving plenty of room for expansion.

Cross-Town Rival

AllianceTexas is about to get some competition from the Dallas Logistics Hub, a 6,000-acre industrial park being developed by the Allen Group. The Dallas Logistics Hub, whose grand opening took place in April, touts itself as the newest and largest industrial logistics park in North America. It is situated adjacent to I-20, the major east-west trucking corridor in the southern United States.

Right now, the centerpiece of the hub is the Union Pacific’s 360-acre intermodal facility. Opened in the fall of 2005, the yard currently has a capacity of 360,000 lifts per year, with plans for more. The facility expects to boost capacity to 600,000 lifts per year by the end of 2007. But the UP may not have the business all to itself for long. Allen Group spokesman Jim Cross says that the Burlington Northern Santa Fe is evaluating the possibility of building an intermodal facility on the west side of the park, which would make the Dallas Logistics Hub the first logistics park in the world to boast two intermodal facilities. Currently, the complex has just two spec buildings, which it hopes to have leased by the end of the year. At full build out in 10 to 15 years, the complex is expected to swell to 60 million square feet of distribution, manufacturing, office, and retail space. Up to two-thirds of that total could be distribution centers.

Up to Date

Meanwhile to the north, Kansas City is pushing ahead with plans to position itself as a distribution hub. The corridor between Houston and Kansas City is expected to see a population boom of nearly 40 percent in the coming years, which makes it a likely focus for companies seeking to establish DCs close to their customer base.

As with Dallas and Fort Worth, the booming U.S.-Asia trade is contributing to the area’s growth. Kansas City officials estimate that more than $9 billion in foreign imports clear U.S. Customs in special report Kansas City each year. The drive to make Kansas City a distribution Mecca is already under way. For example, the Allen Group, developer of the Dallas Logistics Hub, has announced plans to build a similar complex in Gardner, Kansas, 25 miles southwest of Kansas City.

The 1,000-acre logistics complex, to be known as Logistics Park Kansas City, will be located adjacent to the BNSF intermodal facility. And KC SmartPort, a six-year-old economic development agency, seems to have been working overtime to attract big box retailers and consumer goods makers to the area. The agency’s recent wins include Pacific Sunwear, which is building a 400,000-square-foot facility in Olathe, Kansas, and Musician’s Friend, which has signed a 10-year lease for a 702,000- square-foot DC in Kansas City.

Kimberly Clark is also negotiating to lease a half million square foot facility in the region. In addition, at least one area developer is taking the “build it and they will come” route. Kessinger/Hunter will build the region’s first spec distribution facility, which will measure just under 600,000 square feet, in nearby Olathe.

Shortage on the Shores

For all the attention paid to the booming Asian trade, in the end, rising import volumes are only one factor in the growth of inland ports. A severe shortage of land near seaports is also contributing to the trend. In fact, none of the import warehouses being built today are closer than 150 miles to any seaport, according to Arnold Maltz of Arizona State University and Thomas Speh of Miami University in Ohio. Maltz and Speh are the authors of a new research report titled “Import-Driven Warehousing in North America: Challenges and Opportunities.” They presented the results of their research at the Warehousing Education and Research Council’s annual meeting in April.

Maltz and Speh interviewed managers of 19 warehouses located at 10 of the largest U.S. ports for their study. They found that the steady rise in import volumes has created a critical need for more warehouses at the nation’s ports, but that harbor side property is hard to come by. “There’s not a port [in the U.S.] with significant space on the waterfront for warehouse development,” says Maltz.

Besides serving as storage centers, import warehouses play a vital role in transloading and in breaking down ocean-container loads for redistribution, usually by truck or rail. In some cases, port warehouses also provide value-added services, including repacking and labeling merchandise for final sale.

The researchers also reported that cargo handling efficiency varied dramatically from port to port. The process of offloading ocean cargo and transporting it to a warehouse involves multiple participants: steamship lines, stevedoring companies, freight forwarders, customs brokers, port authorities, terminal operators, longshoremen, drayage companies, warehouses, and rail and highway carriers. Import warehouses are highly dependent on the success of those relationships, all of which affect their ability to conduct business, the study noted.

But communications often leave a lot to be desired. “Steamship lines often won’t tell them what’s coming into a warehouse until after it’s off-loaded,” says Maltz.

Sorting Things Out

Right now, the “inland ports” movement is still in the early stages. But if demand for their services starts to grow, importers are likely to begin calling for some changes to current operating procedures. In particular, they might start demanding adjustments in the way in which ships are loaded overseas, says Sara Clark, who wrote a thesis paper on inland ports and is now multimodal transportation planning team leader at Kansas City-based TranSystems, a transportation consulting company.

Today, products are typically loaded onto ships as quickly as possible and in no particular order. But if companies want to offload containers at the port of entry directly onto trains bound for Kansas City or Dallas, that practice will no longer suffice. Instead, the goods will have to be pre-sorted by geographic destination far back in the manufacturing stream.

“I don’t know of any ocean liners doing that [presorting] right now, but I think there could be a trend toward that in the future,” says Clark. She notes that promoting the practice will be more a question of weaning service providers from entrenched habits than of resources. Labor is both inexpensive and plentiful in foreign ports, and the space is available to expand forwarding operations if pre-sorting becomes commonplace. What’s needed now, she says, is for major shippers to step up their demands that products be staged to move directly to their DCs.

Lone Star Logistics; NAFTA Trade Puts Texas at the Center of More Global Supply Chains

TrafficWorld

Lone Star Logistics; NAFTA trade puts Texas at the
center of more global supply chains

June 2, 2007

DALLAS-In a crowning achievement, the Allen Group and BNSF Railway Co. are one step closer to a final agreement to create the only dual intermodal logistics park in North America. The clock is now ticking on a 90-day due-diligence period.

In line with the ground-breaking pact for the 6,027-acre Dallas Logistics Hub, the Allen Group has unveiled plans to start construction in 60 days on the first spec buildings–636,500 sf and 207,755 sf on a 50-acre tract. The $35-million first phase will deliver by year’s end. Just as the park’s being designed with the future in mind so are the buildings: hub-and-spoke distribution centers with 36-foot clear heights and larger than yesteryear. “There is a new generation of buildings that is occurring. That’s one of the reasons we built this park,” Richard S. Allen, CEO of the San Diego-based Allen Group, tells GlobeSt.com. “Those are the buildings of the future.”

Nearly 800 North Texans plus state and federal officials were on hand at Friday’s official unveiling of the park, which has come together in just 3.5 years on the doorstep of Union Pacific Railroad’s 360-acre, $100-million intermodal hub at the crossroads of Interstates 20, 35E South and 45 or as Allen likes to call it, “the golden box.” If the Trans-Texas Corridor become reality, there will be a fourth freeway, Loop 9, bordering the developer’s largest logistics park in its portfolio. The park also has Foreign Trade Zone-designated dirt. It’s projected that $350 million will be spent on infrastructure in and around the park, but the return is a projected $2 billion being added to the tax bases of the cities of Dallas, Hutchins, Lancaster and Wilmer.

The Fort Worth-based BNSF has a major intermodal at Hillwood’s AllianceTexas in Tarrant County and three more in its US network with the Allen Group. In November 2006, BNSF optioned a minimum of 387 acres and maximum of 530 in the Dallas Logistics Hub. It’s since adjusted the max to 490 acres. Allen says the Friday morning signing nudged the deal from 60% done to 90%, triggering due diligence and a seven-digit check when the earnest money goes hard.

“It’s not the final step in the process, but it’s a significant step,” says Edward B. Romanov Jr., the Allen Group’s president and COO. “We’ve got all the major ingredients and a stellar infrastructure that’s unmatched in the US. Truly this is at the crossroads of the international trade center.”

Dallas Logistics Park is projected to create 30,000 direct jobs and another 30,000 indirect jobs over a 20-year period. “We will not see this kind of development again for a very long time. It is as significant, in my opinion, as the Dallas/Fort Worth International Airport was 30 years ago,” Dallas Mayor Laura Miller told the crowd at the unveiling, held at Lancaster Airport, which is transitioning into a primary cargo facility with the extension of its runways. The 5,000-foot runway will be lengthened by 3,000 feet in two phases.

At build-out, Dallas Logistics Hub will have 60 million sf. Although logistics space tops the list, the plan also includes retail, office, hospitality and single-family and multifamily components. Daniel J. McAuliffe, the developer’s point man in Dallas, has been promoted to president of the Allen Development of Texas from vice president of development. Still to be decided will be construction contracts for the upcoming spec buildings–and the leasing assignment.

State of Nuevo Leon, Mexico and The Dallas Logistics Hub Sign Historical Memorandum of Understanding

State of Nuevo Leon, Mexico and The Dallas Logistics Hub Sign Historical Memorandum of Understanding

DALLAS, TX (June 1, 2007) – Mexico-based INVITE and the Texas-based Dallas Logistics Hub signed a historic Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) today to increase the competitiveness of the Interpuerto and the Dallas Logistics Hub as a result of improved logistics systems between Monterrey – Saltillo, Mexico and the Southern Sector of Dallas County, Texas. This new international partnership will focus on improving the security, speed and efficiency of moving goods between these two major logistics centers.

INVITE, an entity of the State of Nuevo Leon, Mexico, which is developing an inland port and manufacturing facility, and The Allen Group, which is developing the 6,000 acre Dallas Logistics Hub in Southern Dallas County of Texas, have signed a Memorandum of Understanding that will create an efficient new trade corridor between Mexico and the United States.

The MOU establishes a collaboration of the parties on several issues, including the designation of a customs pre-clearance zone for the development of integrated logistics systems connecting the Interpuerto in Monterrey – Saltillo, Mexico and the Dallas Logistics Hub in Southern Dallas County, Texas. The objective on both sides of the border is to improve the competitiveness of enterprises established at both locations.

“Customs pre-clearance is important for both parties as it will expedite the flow of goods between Nuevo Leon and Texas and provide additional security for enterprises operating within the facilities,” said Ambassador Francisco Javier-Alejo, Nuevo Leon’s Executive Coordinator for INVITE.

Texas Secretary of State Roger Williams has focused on the promotion of trade and the flow of goods between Mexico and the United States through NEMEX-TX. “This is just the type of partnership we want to see,” said Williams. “It’s good for Texas, and it’s also good for our neighbors to the South in Mexico.”

The parties anticipate that new jobs will be created as a result of the improved competitiveness of U.S. and Mexican enterprises and that these enterprises will be able to compete with manufactured products from other parts of the world.

According to the parties, their collaboration and understanding is motivated by the fact that inefficient logistics systems in the movement of goods between the Mexico and the U.S. is a major impediment to their ability to compete with products imported from other parts of the world. The MOU will facilitate the development of a new and proprietary transportation system to help address these inefficiencies.

“This proprietary transportation system will result in better delivery times and increased competitiveness of Mexican goods being delivered to the Dallas Logistics Hub,” said Dan McAuliffe, president of The Allen Group, the entity constructing the Dallas Logistics Hub.

INVITE is presently involved in several initiatives to create improved logistics systems between the states of North Eastern Mexico and Texas, designated as NEMEX-TEX, including the development of Monterrey as a Logistics Gateway.

The Allen Group is presently involved in the development of the Dallas Logistics Hub, on a site of approximately 6,000 acres adjoining Interstates 35, 45, and 20 in the Dallas/Fort Worth Metroplex, and also manages intermodal logistics parks in Kansas City and along the West Coast of the United States.

Allen Group Signs Deal with Nuevo Leon

Dallas Business Journal

Allen Group Signs Deal with Nuevo Leon

June 1, 2007

The Allen Group, which is building a 6,000-acre logistics hub in southern Dallas County, on Friday inked an agreement with the state of Nuevo Leon, Mexico, to create a new trade corridor between Mexico and the United States.

Under the memorandum of understanding, The Allen group and Nuevo Leon will collaborate on several issues including designating a customs pre-clearance zone between Nuevo Leon’s inland port and the Dallas logistics hub. The partnership is expected to create new jobs because the collaboration will improve the security, speed and efficiency of moving goods between the two logistics centers.

The Allen Group, based in San Diego, Calif., said it forged the agreement with Nuevo Leon because inefficient logistics systems in the movement of goods between the Mexico and the United States are a major hindrance to the logistics hubs’ ability to compete with products imported from other parts of the world.