Monthly Archives: October 2007

Circling the ports

October 22, 2007

Circling the Ports

By Paul T. Rosynsky

For the last decade, California’s Inland Empire has been a gold mine for businesses that build and lease warehouse and distribution centers. With its vast tracts of open land, a ready labor force, friendly municipalities and close proximity to the largest port complex in the nation, the Inland Empire was a haven for businesses seeking to build and lease space for distribution operations. The Inland Empire is an area that begins about 50 miles east of Los Angeles and includes parts of San Bernardino and Riverside counties. One by one, large centers of 100,000 square feet or more shot up like a forest in what was once a barren desert.

The frantic growth even led some to speculate that outlying areas such as the Kern County cities of Lebec (93 miles north of the port complex) and Bakersfield (134 miles north of the ports) would become prime locations for the business of transferring goods. But as the economy continues its slow pace and fuel and other costs and fees associated with transportation rise, the rush to construct new distribution and warehouse centers in the Inland Empire is slowing. Instead, companies that build and lease the centers say, more companies are looking for locations close to the ports, which bring in more than 15 million containers a year.

“It has slowed down a bit as people go back to infill,” said John Magness, senior vice president for Hillwood Properties, a company that has built several distribution centers including Alliance California in San Bernardino. Following the old real estate adage that location trumps all other factors, companies constructing distribution centers frequently searched for sites closest to the ports and other transportation links such as freeways and railroads.

But during the real estate boom of the last decade, finding a location close to the Southern California port complex was difficult. The Allen Group is developing properties farther out from the ports than the Inland Empire. Land prices were high, and many cities chose to use the land for other purposes such as housing or commercial real estate.

The high demand for land led companies to the Inland Empire where municipalities were starved for development particularly the kind that came with jobs. For shippers, the Inland Empire also paid dividends as the price to operate there was cheaper than opening a center in the population center of Los Angeles County. The area exploded with development as did outlying areas where speculators build centers and industrial parks on spec, hoping to attract new distribution centers with cheap labor and land costs. The idea appeared to catch on, and distribution centers were developed even farther out than the Inland Empire.

IKEA built a distribution center in the Tejon Ranch development just along Interstate 5 in Lebec. Target opened a 1.7 million-square-foot center at the International Trade and Transportation Center near Shafter, which is 125 miles north of the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach.

“The developers saw (the demand), and the real estate leaser saw it; it had tremendous growth opportunities,” said Paul Bingham, principal with Global Insight. “When you have trade growth, people need new facilities.”

The growth led to an almost frantic effort by shippers to construct new facilities.

“There were companies that felt pressured, it was the new thing, and everyone else was doing it,” Bingham said.

Shippers followed the big retailers to Inland locations. “You can’t get fired for going to Los Angeles or the Inland Empire,” added Jon Cross, marketing director for the Allen Group.

At the same time, many municipalities in the Inland Empire were welcoming the new development with tax breaks and other incentives. But as the economy began to soften, shippers found they had more options available. Bingham compares it to the housing market. During peak economic times, the price for housing in city cores skyrockets, leading many to find homes in outlying areas such as Tracy in the Bay Area or

San Bernardino County in Southern California. But when the economy goes soft, the real estate market follows, making it more affordable to buy a property closer to the city core. Mattel Inc. built a distribution center at San Bernardino’s Alliance California. With more options available, companies can calculate the risk and rewards of a certain location and find the balance between costs when finding a new location.

“You can think of it, in simple terms, like the housing market,” Bingham said. “When the market falls, you don’t need to go that far away because you can afford the closer-in places.”

With more options available, factors such as drayagecosts, congestion on local highways and real estate prices become determining factors during site location studies.

“The more sophisticated companies are trying to do those computations,” Bingham said. “You calculate the labor costs, the transportation costs, the taxes.”

At the same time, there is less pressure to find space because there is less trade. As a result, companies might not need a large new distribution center; their needs can be met with a smaller building closer to the ports.

“Companies are pulling back because they do not have the volume they had before,” Bingham said. Another factor adding to the slowdown is a cautious lending market, which makes financing a little more expensive.

“We had had a softening of the residential market, which has softened the lending market,” Magness said.

The slowing economy, however, will not last, and many say the growth that sustained the Inland Empire’s distribution center construction boom in the past will return, although with a little less rigor. In fact, many of the companies that have centers east of the Los Angeles-Long Beach port complex said even with the slower economy they continue to see some growth in their market.

“There is still much more property remaining,” Magness said. “As long as the ports of Los Angeles and Long Beach continue to grow, that is good news for us.”

While imports of containers will not reach the growth levels seen in the first half of the decade, many predict they will rise again, spurring another round of distribution center construction.The rush to build massive new distribution centers in the Inland Empire has slowed somewhat as the economy has slowed. “It is not going to go away,”

Bingham said. “We are confident in saying the market is going to come back.”

And when it does, companies that built centers in outlying areas could benefit.

“The Bakersfield region has been a little slower than we projected, but I think in the next three to five years, we are going to see a dramatic increase,” Cross said. “The new spot was the Inland Empire, but what we are seeing now is that the Inland Empire only has about three years worth of land left.”

Cross predicts that, eventually, the higher costs of transportation that come with building outside of the Inland Empire will be offset with the cheaper cost of land and ready labor force.

“Someone might say that your drayage cost to take a container to the Inland Empire from the port might be cheaper,” Cross said. “However, it is all abouttotal cost savings; there is no way your drayage costs can outweigh the cheaper lease costs.”

Cheaper lease costs will also become a factor as companies search for larger facilities to match the growth in size of containers and ships. As ships become larger, companies will have to handle more cargo at one time increasing the need for large warehouse space, Cross said.

“The Fortune 500 companies of the world are seeing the boxes get larger,” he said. “At the same time, there is becoming very little room to handle those boxes in the Inland Empire for a feasible cost.”

For some companies, such as large retailers like Target, that day has come, bu t for others, the Inland Empire will continue to be the prime location at least for now, others argue. Bingham agrees and said the current slowdown will not last.

“The real question is how much longer, is it two years or five years?” he said. “Those areas do not get crossed off the list; there is no situation where I see that happening.

“It’s not a boom time now, but that doesn’t mean you abandon the market and it has no role any more,” he continued.

Even companies with interests in the Inland Empire agree that the outlying areas will see their heyday.

“Those days will come for Tejon, Bakersfield and Shafter,” Magness said. “But before those markets hit their stride, you are going to see a lot more infill.”

In fact, Magness said his firm is constantly searching for new areas for speculation construction.

“We are actively pursuing other properties in and around Southern California,” he said. “There continues to be healthy competition.”

South Dallas County Becoming Freight/Warehousing Hub

October 16, 2007

South Dallas County Becoming Freight/Warehousing Hub

By Liz Moucka

Dallas, Tex. – Bob Moore Construction of Arlington, Texas has been contracted to build a major new office and warehouse building south of Dallas on behalf of developer First Industrial Realty Trust. The 758,922-square-foot office and warehouse building will be located in the DalPort Business Park in Wilmer, Texas, along I-45 south of I-20 in the vicinity of the Union Pacific Intermodal Terminal that opened in 2006. General contractor Bob Moore Construction will work with Dallas architect Pross Design Group, Inc. on this building. Ground breaking for the DalPort Business Park warehouse / office project is planned for November 5, 2007. The building is planned to be completed by early summer, 2008. The Allen Group, developer of the Dallas Logistics Hub (The Hub), a 6,000 acre logistics park in Southern Dallas County, has selected two Dallas area contractors for the construction of its first two spec warehouse/ distribution buildings, 3i Construction, LLC and MYCON General Contractors, Inc. Construction of Buildings 1 and 2 will be completed by February 2008.

The Dallas Logistics Hub (“The Hub”) is the largest new logistics park under development in North America, with over 6,000 acres master-planned for the development of 60 million square feet of distribution, manufacturing, office and retail uses with exceptional Intermodal, rail and highwayaccess. 3i Construction, LLC has been retained for the construction of DLH Building 2, a 192,850 square foot warehouse building and to provide additional construction services for The Hub’s DLH Building 1. MYCON General Contractors, Inc., of McKinney has been retained for the construction of DLH Building 1, a 635,000 square foot cross-dock distribution facility.

Allen Group Breaks Ground on 827,000 SF in The Hub

October 10, 2007

Allen Group Breaks Ground on 827,000 SF in The Hub

Distribution Center and Warehouse Will Deliver
in April 2008

By Alex Fox-Collis

The Allen Group started construction on DLH Building I, a 635,000-square-foot cross-dock distribution center, and DLH Building II, a 192,850- square-foot warehouse facility in the Dallas Logistics Hub, a 6,000-acre multi-modal logistics park. These first two buildings will bring 827,000 square feet of new industrial inventory to the Southeast Dallas County industrial market. Both buildings will be available for occupancy in April 2008. The properties are at 4800 and 4900 Langdon Road in Dallas, TX.

“The Hub has quickly emerged as the prime logistics location in North Texas because of its strategic access to rail, intermodal, and highwayinfrastructure,” said Daniel J. McAuliffe, president of Allen Development of Texas.

The development team includes GSO Architects, Kimley-Horn & Associates, MYCON and 3i Construction.

Daniel J. McAuliffe of the Allen Group handles preleasing.

Logistics Real Estate: Allen Group Kicks Off Construction

October 8, 2007

Logistics Real Estate: Allen Group Kicks Off Construction at
the Dallas Logistics Hub

By Jeff Berman

DALLAS—Commercial real estate developer The Allen Group recently said that it has begun construction on the first two industrial park buildings at the Dallas Logistics Hub (DLH), which, Allen says, is the largest new logistics park being developed in North America.

The new buildings include DLH Building 1, a 635,000 square-foot cross-dock distribution facility, and DLH Building 2, a 192,850 square-foot warehouse facility, which are scheduled to open in April 2008.

The DLH is a 6,000-acre multi-modal logistics park that will offer more than 60 million square-feet of industrial space for lease. It is master-planned for the development of 60 million square feet of vertical logistics and manufacturing space, according to the Allen Group. And it is adjacent to Class I railroad carrier Union Pacific’s Southern Dallas Intermodal Terminal, the Burlington Northern Santa Fe (BNSF) rail line and a proposed BNSF intermodal facility, major highway connectors—I-20, I-35, I-45 and Loop 9, and Lancaster Airport, which is in the master-planning stage to facilitate air-cargo distribution. Allen added that the DLH is a major component of the NAFTA infrastructure and will act as a major inland port bringing products from rail from the Gulf of Mexico and Pacific-based ports such as the Ports of Los Angeles, Long Beach, and Houston, and the Western deep water ports in Mexico for national and regional distribution.

Earlier this year, Dan McAuliffe, vice president for The Allen Group’s Texas management team, told Logistics Management that this first phase of development at the DLH will open up more than 750 acres of land. He added that the DLH’s development is part of four different cities in Texas: Dallas, Lancaster, Wilmer, and Hitchins. McAuliffe also said that the main benefit of the DLH for shippers is that it will provide them with several options for importing and exporting freight, as well as close proximity to an intermodal facility.

“Once a container is unloaded from a train to a trailer chassis, the haul to the warehouse [drayage] can in some case be more than $2.75 per mile,” he said. “When you evaluate the additional operating cost of a facility which is located 20 miles from the intermodal facility, the annual drayage costs could be equal to the rent paid on the warehouse.”

Other shipper benefits cited by McAuliffe were the DLH’s close proximity to major highways in Texas, and dual Class I railroad carriers, which he said would make the DLH the only industrial park in North America with dual Class I intermodal facilities that would give shippers greater flexibility and a higher level of service.

Dallas/Fort Worth Breaking News 827,850-SF Spec Project Gets Under Way

October 5, 2007

Dallas/Fort Worth Breaking News

827,850-SF Spec Project Gets Under Way

By Connie Gore

DALLAS-The long-awaited start of the first industrial space in the 6,000-acre Dallas Logistics Hub is about to get under way. The spec buildings, totaling 827,850 sf, will be ready to light in April. “On Monday, dirt will be flying,” vows Daniel J. McAuliffe, president of Allen Development of Texas. He tells GlobeSt.com that the start was delayed by a couple months as the San Diego-based developer made some design and site changes and followed through on a policy for 25% of the project to be subcontracted to minority- and women-owned businesses. “It was a bidding process that took longer than normal,” he says, explaining more news will be forthcoming in the coming weeks. McAuliffe says the decision to shift the buildings’ locations by 100 feet necessitated a slight redesign that also resulted in additional trailer spaces being factored into the plan and lower construction costs. The initial development, originally estimated to cost $35 million, will be situated on roughly 50 of the developer’s 6,000 acres.

4900 Langdon Rd. DLH Building 1 will be 635,040 sf, a 32-foot clear height cross-dock with 126 dock doors and up to 213 trailer spaces. The 4800 Langdon Rd. project will have a 185-foot truck court. DHL Building 2 at 4900 Langdon Rd. will be a traditional office/warehouse with 192,850 sf, 28-foot clear height, up to 363 parking spaces and 41 dock doors. The truck courts are 110 feet, 149 feet and 170 feet and trailer parking is available. GSO Architects of Dallas designed the buildings and is the structural engineer. Kimley-Horn & Associates’ Dallas team did the civil engineering for the development. In July, the Allen Group awarded DLH Building 1’s construction pact to Mycon General Contractors Inc. of McKinney, TX and DLH Building 2 to 3i Construction LLC, a Dallasbased minority-owned firm, which also will provide additional construction services for the larger box. McAuliffe says the industrial submarket, supported by one operating intermodal yard and another one on www.allengroup.com the drawing board, is living up to expectations. “In the last 60 days, quite a few large deals have identified where they want to go,” he says. “There are one million sf of deals in South Dallas that have been completed or on the verge of being completed.”

The Allen Group’s flagship space for the multimodal logistics park, envisioned as an international trade corridor, is being marketed at $3.35 per sf with a $3 per sf tenant-improvement allowance. At buildout, the park is projected to have 60 million sf of logistics, retail, office, hospitality, single-family and multifamily space plus direct or near-direct access to four freeways. It’s taken the developer nearly four years to get the groundbreaking development to a ground-breaking stage. McAuliffe says his team is locked in talks with one prospect for DLH Building 2 and chasing several deals for the cross-dock box. “The market’s there. The users are out there,” he reports. “But, you’ve got to build it before you see those users.”

The Allen Group Starts Construction on First Industrial Buildings at the Dallas Logistics Hub

The Allen Group Starts Construction on First Industrial Buildings at the Dallas Logistics Hub

Over 827,000 square feet of distribution/warehouse space available for lease

DALLAS, TX (Oct. 4, 2007) — The Allen Group has started construction on the first two industrial buildings at the Dallas Logistics Hub (“The Hub”), a 6,000 acre multi-modal logistics park. These buildings will provide over 827,000 square feet of new industrial space for lease in the emerging Southeast Dallas County industrial market.

DLH Building 1, a 635,000 square-foot cross-dock distribution facility, and DLH Building 2, a 192,850 square-foot warehouse facility, will both be available for occupancy in April 2008.

The development team includes: GSO Architects, as architects and structural engineers; Kimley-Horn & Associates as civil engineers and MYCON and 3i Construction, as general contractors.

“The Dallas Logistics Hub is open for business,” said Daniel J. McAuliffe, President of Allen Development of Texas. “The Hub has quickly emerged as the prime logistics location in North Texas because of its strategic access to rail, intermodal and highway infrastructure.”

The Dallas Logistics Hub is adjacent to Union Pacific’s Southern Dallas Intermodal Terminal, a proposed BNSF intermodal facility, four major highway connectors (I-20, I-45, I-35 and Loop 9) and Lancaster Airport, which is in the master-planning stage to facilitate air-cargo distribution. The Hub is also a key component of the NAFTA infrastructure and will serve as a major “Inland Port” by receiving products from the Ports of Los Angles, Long Beach, Houston, and the new deep-water ports in western Mexico for regional and national distribution.

For more information about pre-leasing please contact Daniel J. McAuliffe at 214-661-1800.

For more information on the Dallas Logistics Hub, please visit the projects interactive website www.dallashub.com.

*Editor’s note: High-resolution current construction photos and DLH building renderings are available upon request.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE

For more information contact: Amy Toosley, Senior Account Executive
Allison & Partners
Phone: 619-533-7976
E-mail: amy@allisonpr.com

Jon Cross, Director of Marketing
The Allen Group
Phone: 858-764-6800
E-mail: jcross@allengroup.com

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 visit www.allengroup.com.

Allen Group to Construct Two Buildings at MidState 99 Center

Valley Voice Newspaper

Allen Group to Construct Two Buildings at
MidState 99 Center

October 3, 2007

The Allen Group, a commercial development firm specializing in logistics parks and industrial developments, announced construction plans for two additional industrial buildings at its MidState 99 Distribution Center in Visalia, one of the fastest growing industrial markets in the state.

The 139,590-square-foot MidState Hayes Building 5 and 140,700-aquare-foot MidState Hayes Building 6 will both be developed as warehouse/distributionfacilities. The project is currently underconstruction,with buildings available for occupancyin April 2008.

The MidState 99 Distribution Center has eightexisting buildings totaling over two million squarefeet, all of which are 100 percent occupied. Current tenants include VF Corporation, International Paper Company, JoAnn Stores, Coast Distribution Systems, Workflow One, Worms Way, Bound Tree Medical, ORS NASCO and DATS Trucking.Approximately 200 acres are left for build-to-suit opportunities up to 1 million square feet. The development team includes: TaylorTeterPartnership, as architects and structural engineers Lane Engineers Inc., as civil engineers and B.J. Perch Construction, as general contractors.