When
the law firm Venable Baetjer Howard & Civiletti
surveyed real estate in downtown Washington, D.C.,
a year ago, it didn't find much appealing. The firm
needed room for 200 employees so it could consolidate
two locations. A couple of rehab projects were the
only things available, but they weren't very exciting.
"There wasn't a lot to choose from for our
size and date of occupation," says William
Coston, managing partner of the firm's Washington
office.
Yet,
Venable ended up downtown after all, leasing 245,000
square feet at the Terrell Place development project
across from the MCI Center at 7th and F streets.
The firm's search committee was impressed with the
continued strength of the downtown market and the
flurry of activity there. "The location is
in the heart of the new downtown with restaurants,
art galleries, transportation and entertainment,"
says Coston. "We think it will be a good location
to attract young lawyers who want to be at a firm
that's in a vibrant downtown rather than a sterile
metal suitcase."
That's
a switch. Just a few years ago, the hottest spot
in the Washington-Baltimore commercial real estate
market was Northern Virginia. Millions in hot investment
dollars were flooding in as exciting high-technology
companies - notably telecommunications - were leasing
up shiny new offices. But many of those firms have
tanked, and now the vacancy rates are as high as
25 percent in such high-tech corridors as Herndon.
By
contrast, downtown Washington is chugging along.
Despite a slowdown in 2001, vacancy rates there,
including sublet space, remain in the single digits
at 9.6 percent. Rents are among the most stable
in the country, averaging $46.40-a-square-foot last
year compared to $46 in 2000. And plush class-A
buildings in the district are set to break the $400-per-square-foot
threshold. Unlike Northern Virginia, downtown is
a sellers' market. Most landlords are not offering
rent concessions as they are across the Potomac
River.
What's
driving the rush downtown? A flood of federal spending
after the Sept. 11 terrorist attacks. Federal agencies
are ramping up and grabbing office space, making
for slim pickings. Big law firms such as Venable
likewise are on a leasing binge, making downtown
Washington one of the hottest commercial real estate
markets in the nation. "The government is the
underlying foundation here. Law firms are here,
associations are here, corporate and government
affairs' offices. It's really a stable base,"
says Scott Price, director of research for Delta
Associates, a real estate research firm in Alexandria.
The
market's strength is changing downtown's geography.
For years, an imaginary line seemed to exist down
14th Street. Law firms, lobbyists and other prime
tenants would not rent east of the line. Yet, the
line has been slowly stretching eastward as available
prime space disappears. One consequence is that
the city's downtown core is taking on an after-hours
life that's never really existed in Washington as
it has in New York and other major cities. "People
are going where they wouldn't have gone before,"
says Thomas M. Fulcher Jr., a senior vice president
at the brokerage firm of Julien J. Studley.
Demand
for large new spaces has fueled new projects. The
lower end of the market is getting stripped out
to create larger spaces in redevelopment projects
such as the one at Terrell Place that will connect
the original Hecht's store in Washington with a
new nine-story building that incorporates historic
facades and another new 11-story building.
While
good news to big-time tenants, smaller ones are
getting squeezed out. There are few deals in the
50,000- to 75,000-square foot range because landlords
are reluctant to break up larger spaces, and they're
waiting in the belief that rental rates will go
up. "Once they do that, they lose all their
ability to bring in a large user," says real
estate lawyer Casey Aiken.
On
the down side, however, there are signs that the
Washington market is softening. There have been
no sector meltdowns as in Virginia, but concerns
linger about the economy and uncertainties after
the terrorist attacks. The District's healthy vacancy
rate could edge upwards to 10 percent by year's
end with about 2 million square feet of sublet space
expected to be returned to the market by the end
of June. Tenants are not going out of business,
but they remain jittery, says John Donovan, managing
director for the Washington region of CarrAmerica,
a real estate investment trust. "They're heading
to the sidelines. They're trying to avoid making
decisions since their crystal ball isn't working
well," he says. At the moment, however, downtown
D.C. is riding high.
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to Virginia Business - June 2002