Finial Group facilitates a lease at 26440 FM 1093, Suites 430 & 420, in Richmond, Texas

Jason Gibbons and John Buckley of Finial Group recently secured a lease at 26440 FM 1093, Suites 430 and 420, in Richmond, Texas.

The combined suite space is a total of 2,625 square feet with direct access off FM 1093.

The property’s surrounding neighborhoods and demographics strategically places it in a high-visibility area. The tenant, Next Level Jiu Jitsu, provides jiu jitsu classes to both adults and kids of all ages.

Jason Gibbons and John Buckley represented the landlord in this transaction.

Berkadia arranges sale of Houston value-add garden-style multifamily community

Berkadia has arranged the sale of Edgewater Apartments, a 228-unit, Class A garden-style multifamily apartment community located in Lake Jackson, Texas, a suburb of Houston.

Senior Managing Directors Chris Curry and Todd Marix, Managing Director Jeffrey Skipworth, Managing Directors Chris Young and Joey Rippel, and Director Kyle Whitney of Berkadia Houston, along with Director Adam Sumrall, Senior Managing Director Kelly Witherspoon, Senior Directors Justin Cole and Michael Gonzalez of Berkadia Austin represented the seller, Redwood Capital Group out of Chicago. A New York-based buyer acquired the property for an undisclosed price. 

“Edgewater is consistently one of the top-performing multifamily assets in Lake Jackson with limited competition. The regional economy is anchored by a healthy and expanding petrochemical industry and will drive new housing demand and strong fundamentals,” said Curry. “Edgewater will continue to perform well and drive cash flow for the new owner.”   

Completed in 2005 and located at 514 That Way St., Edgewater consists of 19 two-story residential buildings and one one-story clubhouse on a 12-acre site. The pet-friendly, gated community offers one- and two-bedroom floor plans ranging from 742 square feet to 1,319 square feet. Individual units feature built-in desks and bookshelves, garden-style bathtubs, expansive walk-in closets and private patios and balconies. 

Community amenities include beautifully landscaped social areas, a pool, an elegant clubhouse with a business center, picnic arbor with gas grills, an enclosed pet park with agility equipment and a fully equipped 24-hour fitness center. Reserved parking, detached garages and storage units are available. 

Edgewater is located approximately 45 minutes south of Houston in Lake Jackson in Brazoria County, consistently ranked one of the best places to live in Texas, and within a short drive to two of the major petrochemical companies, Dow Chemical and BASF. Other major employers nearby include Olin, Wood, Brazos Mall and St. Luke’s Health- Brazosport Hospital. 

cura interiors, within Dallas Architecture Firm “three” Launches

Following the addition this year of Sarah Bay, RID, IIDA as Director of Interior Design, national architecture firm three has announced the formation of cura interiors, a studio devoted to the creation of inspiring environments for clubhouses and workplace settings.

According to Bay, the new studio leverages three’s decades of experience to expand the mission to create “design that lifts the human spirit”. Founded on the same core principles that made the Dallas firm a nationally recognized architectural practice in hospitality and senior living, cura interiors will apply three’s unique client engagement process to interior design for commercial offices and leisure spaces.

Bay’s design team will lead clients through a discovery process for each project, resulting in designs that take their cues from feelings and emotions the environment is intended to elicit in the end user.

According to Bay, today’s employees value well-designed environments in which they feel comfortable, healthy, productive and valued, and discerning employers competing for highly skilled recruits have learned that a hospitality-inspired design approach can help realize appealing, cutting-edge workplaces, helping to attract and retain top talent.

Hitting the ground running, cura‘s first major project win is the complete renovation and redesign of the clubhouse for Pinnacle Golf Club, a residential-recreational community on Cedar Creek Lake southeast of Dallas. Other notable accomplishments for Bay with previous firms include a major headquarters expansion in Westlake, Texas for a national insurance company.

The Biggest Hurdle to Financing Commercial Deals Today? It’s the Uncertainty

Multifamily properties continue to see high demand. Financing new apartment construction or acquisitions, though, has become challenging with rising interest rates.

The uncertainty is the problem. That’s what makes financing commercial real estate acquisitions and construction loans so difficult today. Just ask Fritz Waldvogel, senior vice president in the Minneapolis office of Colliers Mortgage. He says that there is still plenty of interest among investors and developers in commercial real estate. The challenge is making the numbers work, with the uncertainty over rising interest rates scuttling many potential deals.

We recently spoke with Waldvogel about the state of the commercial financing industry. This industry veteran said that financing deals is no easy task today. But the future? He’s optimistic that the second half of 2023 will see an influx of new financing requests.

Here’s some of what Waldvogel had to say:

Has the volume of commercial financing requests slowed because of rising interest rates?
Fritz Waldvogel: Even with the volatility of the last 12 months, there has been a lot of quoting activity. But deals aren’t coming together as quickly as they once were. The deals that are happening are mostly loan assumptions. We aren’t seeing as many new placements. The 10-year Treasury has been all over the board, up and down. It’s challenging to feel good about financing until you have a deal that is rate-locked.

How difficult has the uncertainty over rates been for the financing industry?
Waldvogel: It’s hard to feel good about the debt markets. The agencies, Fannie and Freddie, are still open for business. But there is a big gap between where current pricing is based on sellers’ expectations and what buyers can afford to pay. We are not seeing as many transactions closing on the sales side.

What kind of financing deals are you still seeing today?
Waldvogel: We work on a lot of multifamily transactions. There are new deals in this space, but a higher percentage of them are loan assumptions. The debt is already outstanding. A new buyer can come in and assume an existing note. In those cases, the buyers don’t have to worry about the volatility of the debt markets. If you are looking at a 10-year term loan that was closed two years ago, there are still eight years remaining. The interest rate on that might be in the threes. That’s a very attractive rate today.

There is definitely some sticker shock today when we are quoting rates to people. When we started quoting deals in the 6% to 7% range, people’s jaws almost dropped to the floor.

I guess that begs the question, have we been spoiled a bit by how low interest rates have been?
Waldvogel: We have had a good run of super low interest rates. That meant a lot of transaction activity. But now, you don’t have as many deals that can be refinanced. We did a lot of refinances in 2020 and 2021. There just aren’t as many deals today that make sense for a refinance.

What about next year? Do you think we’ll see a bit more stability in 2023?
Waldvogel: I think there will continue to be volatility in the market next year. But at some point, people will start transacting again if the interest rates have settled down in some way. We need a tighter band of interest rate fluctuations so that people feel better closing deals. As you get into next year, more debt sources should come back. The life insurance companies and bridge lenders that are currently not in the market should be coming back next year. When we have more alternatives to the agencies, developers and investors will have more options.

How have interest rates impacted the demand for construction loans?
Waldvogel: I spoke with a developer last week who said that developers were facing a two-headed monster. They have higher interest rates that impact getting deals financed but also construction costs that are still fairly high. The combination of those two has put a lot of deals on the sidelines. If interest rates come down a little next year and construction costs come down, we’ll start to see more of those deals. But there has been quite a bit of supply that was planned for the next six to 12 months that is not moving forward.

We are seeing the same thing on the multifamily side. Rent growth has been really strong over the last six or seven years. What we need now is to get rents down. To do that, we need more supply. But because of higher interest rates and construction costs, we are not seeing that new supply.

Do you still see great demand from renters for multifamily space?
Waldvogel: The fundamentals of the multifamily market are still strong. You are seeing solid occupancy in the Midwest and solid rent growth. The volatility that is making life challenging is more because of capital markets issues than any fundamentals in the apartment market.

Why has demand for multifamily remained so high for so long?
Waldvogel: I’ve been in the business about 10 years on the lending side. Rents just continue to go up. We need more housing in this country. And with rates going up, that has made single-family housing less affordable. That pushes people to rent longer. The single-family rental space has become a hot asset class. That space should continue to perform well during the next five years. Millennials and members of Generation Z want a house and a yard. But they can’t afford to buy a house. Renting a single-family home is a good solution. You feel more settled down than you do when you are living in an apartment. You have a yard and more space, but you still are renting. Over the last two or three years, we’ve been seeing more capital flowing into that space. The higher interest rates have only pushed that demand higher. The demographics were already there. The higher rates just make that market even more appealing.

What do you look at when determining if a financing request is a solid one?
Waldvogel: We focus heavily on the property’s financial performance and take into account the borrowers’ overall experience. We look at both. You have to make sure that the financial performance is strong, but you also need an understanding of who your borrower is. The borrowers’ experience level plays a role, too.

A lot of buyers have moved into the multifamily space during the last seven or 10 years. They came from other asset classes as demand for multifamily just kept rising.

You mentioned earlier that the country is still seeing a shortage of housing. Is that changing at all?
Waldvogel: On a macro level, the country is severely under-housed. That’s especially true with affordable housing or even market-rate housing. It is very challenging to keep up with the demand that is out there for housing. To get more, we need local governments and the private sector to work together to make deals happen. We need new housing desperately.

Looking into the future, what do you see in the financing market for next year?
Waldvogel: I am still bullish that 2023 will see activity pick up, especially in the second or third quarter. I think 2023 will be better than 2022 in terms of the number of requests that ultimately get done.

South Texas Retail Center Trades to Dallas-based Dunhill Partners

JLL Capital Markets announced today that it has closed the sale of the 206,284-square-foot, value-add Northcross Shopping Center located within a prime retail corridor in Victoria, Texas.

JLL marketed the property for a Dallas-based client and sold it to Dunhill Partners.

The 91% occupied Northcross Shopping Center is currently leased to Ashley Furniture, Office Depot, Tuesday Morning, Dollar General, Dollar Tree and more. Additionally, the center has presented strong leasing momentum with Ace Hardware, Pittsburgh Paint, Beauty Bar, Any Lab Test Now and Rock Discount Vitamins.

Located at 5016–5319 N. Navarro St., Northcross Shopping Center sits at the intersection of U.S 77 and Sam Houston Drive and is positioned between the power markets of Houston and Corpus Christi. The center is visible to approximately 40,573 vehicles per day and is situated in a super-regional trade area reaching a customer base from the surrounding 50 miles. The property benefits from Victoria County’s population of approximately 92,084 and average household income of $83,767.

The JLL Retail Capital Markets Investment Sales and Advisory team that represented the seller was led by Senior Managing Director Adam Howells, Managing Director George Cushing and Analysts Matthew Barge and Cole Sutter.

Griffin Partners Announces Disposition of Industrial Development in N Houston

Griffin Partners, an entrepreneurial commercial real estate investment, development and property management firm, recently sold Pinto 23, a Class A industrial development in North Houston to Hines, the global real estate investment, development, and property manager. Pinto 23 is located within Pinto Business Park and was co-developed with Pinto Realty Partners.

The newly delivered project, Pinto 23, features a 282,190-square-foot cross-dock industrial building with 36-foot clear heights, 76 dock doors, 112 trailer spaces with capacity for 44 additional spaces and 4,604 square feet of spec office and frontage along Beltway 8, one of Houston’s most strategic logistical thoroughfares.

Located at 10909 Greens Crossing Boulevard, the project is strategically located at the Southwest intersection of Interstate 45 and Beltway 8 in the North Houston submarket within Pinto Business Park. Pinto Business Park, Houston’s largest deed-restricted business park with over 5.3 million square feet of rentable space, is currently over 98% leased.

Griffin Partners and Pinto Realty Partners delivered the Project in October 2022 and were already seeing significant leasing activity prior to the sale.

Trent Agnew at JLL represented the seller in the transaction. Hines has awarded the leasing of the property to Faron Wiley at CBRE.

In addition to the building amenities and quality construction, the Pinto Business Park location has attracted numerous national corporations within a one-mile radius, including Amazon, Sysco, Coca-Cola, Home Depot Supply and Emser Tile distribution centers. Directly adjacent to the site on its western edge, Amazon occupies an 850,000-square-foot fulfillment warehouse.