D.R. Horton Acquires 170-Acres in North Fort Worth for Residential Development

D.R. Horton has purchased a 170-acre residential development site in North Fort Worth with plans to buildD.R. Horton has purchased a 170-acre residential development site in North Fort Worth with plans to build specialize in land and lot sales to homebuilders and master-planned community developers throughout the metroplex for Land Advisors Organization’s Dallas-Fort Worth office, represented the seller in the transaction. No purchase price was released. The site is located a few miles north of Interstate 820, on the south side of Bailey Boswell Road and offers access to Boat Club Road to the west and Business Highway 287 to the east, providing commuting access for future residents. The property is directly adjacent to Boswell High School and minutes from Wayside Middle School and Bryson Elementary School making it an ideal location for families. Eagle Mountain Lake and the Fort Worth Nature Center and Refuge to the west of the property compliment the sites desirable location by also offering residents quick access to outdoor recreational space, according to Land Advisors Organization. Click to read more at www.fortworthbusiness.com.

NewQuest Launches Asia-Pacific Retail Division

NewQuest Properties introduced a new international division in the Asia-Pacific Region. Development partner Heather Nguyen, based in Houston, will lead NewQuest Asia-Pacific Retail, a veteran team of brokers and affiliates in China, Japan, South Korea, Singapore, Taiwan and Vietnam. NewQuest managing partner Jay Sears is integrally involved and will spearhead capital investments. The team’s 10 professionals have more than 120 years of retail industry experience. “We’ve built strong relationships with overseas companies through the years. We understand their businesses and needs in the U.S.,” Nguyen said. “This is an unparalleled growth opportunity for NewQuest and our existing and future clients.” The expanded team includes Jason Wang, development director; Yoshihide Murata, development senior consultant and Kaishu Okada, business development consultant who is based in Tokyo. Wang most recently was development director for 85° C Bakery & Café’s U.S. expansion. Yoshihide formerly was vice president of real estate for Daiso Japan. Kaishu previously was senior managing director of Newmark Knight Frank’s Japan office. NewQuest’s new division also includes Naoyuki Kondo, retail leasing specialist who joined the brokerage firm earlier this year. He was the former real estate director for Kura Revolving Sushi Bar and spearheaded its expansion in the U.S. Rounding out the Asia-Pacific group are longtime NewQuest brokers Rebecca Le, senior vice president; John Nguyen, vice president; and Grace La, associate. “Texas has quickly become a retail powerhouse for Asian-Pacific tenants seeking to expand their operations in the U.S., and NewQuest Properties has proudly represented several internationally renowned players in this space with great success,” said Katherine Hatcher, president and COO. “The international expansion of our retail brokerage celebrates an exciting new chapter for NewQuest with great potential on the horizon.” Asia-Pacific is the world’s largest retail market, boasting innovative brands with strong growth trajectories in e-commerce and physical locations. Statista pegs APAC’s sales volume in the U.S. in e-commerce alone at $3.6 trillion. In the past five years, the region’s sales more than quadrupled that of the rest of the world, according to Bain & Co. “Asia-Pacific brands have experienced tremendous growth in their domestic and European markets. The U.S. is their next new market,” Nguyen said. “Our team will help these companies grow in the U.S. and make the right decisions to ensure a higher ratio of success.” NewQuest’s Carrollton Town Center, a 150,227-square feet retail redevelopment in north Dallas, is the genesis for the Asia-Pacific brokerage division. Through Nguyen and her team, scores of Asian dining and retail concepts have been introduced to Texas—some gaining an initial point of entry to the U.S. and others expanding for the first time beyond California and New York. “Carrollton Town Center’s success caught the attention of companies overseas,” Nguyen said. “Its tenants are hitting record sales this year. Texas has proven to the world that business can continue even during a pandemic.” The number of Asia-Pacific retailers looking to move to the Americas is growing by the day. In 2019, foreign direct investments from Asia Pacific in the United States amounted to approximately $858.5 billion U.S. dollars, according to Statista. For many brands, the Americas present the largest new customer pool for global growth. As the globalization of consumer culture continues, Asia-Pacific retailers are finding an increasingly receptive market and often distinguish themselves as a breath of fresh air into an otherwise saturated, mature retail market. The Asia-Pacific division will benefit from NewQuest’s development expertise. “If our client wants a specific retail synergy, we’ll find the right opportunity in its preferred market. If it doesn’t exist, we can build from the ground up and create the opportunity to meet our client’s needs,” Nguyen said. “We’re different in that we’re not just a brokerage company.” NewQuest’s new division has been five years in the making as the core team fine-tuned the development concept, resulting in upscale Asian-centric retail centers in Dallas and Houston. The firm’s brokers have built deep relationships globally along the way. “NewQuest is taking its talented brokerage team to greater heights with the addition of the Asia-Pacific Retail group,” Sears said. “Despite challenges for commercial real estate, our firm is thriving and continues to grow its portfolio and depth.

What’s Driving Distribution? CBRE Experts Weigh In on the Industrial Market

In the pre-pandemic world, e-commerce was already a giant. Industry observers predicted it would account for more than a third of all retail sales by the year 2030. Now, roughly a year since we first heard about COVID-19, the virus helped accelerate the growth of e-commerce in a way few could have predicted in 2019. “Even older Americans are now accustomed to buying things online, so it’s pervasive,” said Jack Fraker, vice chairman and managing director at CBRE. Now that threshold of 39 percent of retail sales is viewed as something e-commerce could reach by mid-2027. To meet that consumer demand, Fraker said, there is and will be a need for much more industrial real estate. Texas markets, such as Dallas-Fort Worth, Houston, Austin, San Antonio and El Paso, are benefitting from that push because of their ever-growing populations. On the one hand, explained Fraker, manufacturers want to get distribution hubs closer to their customers to satisfy the existing demands. More than ever, customers expect to receive goods within days of ordering, if not the very next day. “All those retail products have to reside inside warehouses for a while,” Fraker said. Click to read more at www.rednews.com.

TexAmericas Center Breaks Ground on a New Spec Building

TexAmericas Center broke ground on a new speculative building to support future tenants relocating to, or growing in, the Texarkana region. The 150,000-square-foot building on 24 acres will be ready for new tenants in the summer of 2021 and is the first new building in the industrial park in 15 years. The spec building provides potential tenants with a space that has key required features and will be ready for immediate occupancy. In addition to the extended timeline that a build-to-suit option may have, a spec building also can limit upfront investment hurdles for potential tenants. “A spec building allows us to offer potential tenants the type of facility and features in demand without the time and expense of a custom contract,” said Scott Norton, executive director/CEO of TexAmericas Center. “It’s like an ‘If you build it, they will come’ investment in the future of our region.” TexAmericas Center leaders worked with other community economic development professionals to plan the building which includes features that are attractive to potential tenants, flexible across a variety of industries and scalable to meet a host of needs. The building is designed as a multi-tenant, mixed-use facility with 32-foot clear height ceilings, one dock door per 5,000 square feet and two drive-in doors. The building will accommodate uses like large warehousing inventory akin to what you would find in a large metro market with the capability to subdivide down to 13,000-square-foot units as needed. “We hear, time and again, that companies considering relocation or expansion at TexAmericas Center are impressed with the infrastructure updates made to the industrial park and appreciate an impressive transportation corridor that uses multiple state highways, interstates, air freight and rail lines to disperse from a central U.S. location,” said Norton. Additionally, new companies have access to a deep supply of skilled workers from a wide range of schools in the Texarkana area. TexAmericas Center has a 500-mile reach of 53.8 million people, which is 10 million more than the 500-mile reach of Dallas. “The spec building is yet another example of our flexibility and adaptability to meet unique business needs,” said Eric Voyles, executive vice president and chief economic development officer with TexAmericas Center. “When a potential business wants to locate here, we help manage upfront investment and become their partners. They can feel confident in taking that next step because we have skin in the game, too.” The groundbreaking for the spec building is just another in a series of successes for TexAmericas Center. In July, it announced that Lockheed Martin, a global security and aerospace company employing more than 110,000 people worldwide, will expand operations in support of a public/private partnership contract with the Red River Army Depot. TexAmericas Center was named the site of a proposed new $200 million regional water treatment center to support long-term growth projections for the region and added third-party logistics services to its suite of business services.

CBRE Brokers Sale of Bella Vista Creek Apartments in East Dallas

CBRE announced the sale of Bella Vista Creek, a 272-unit, Class B multifamily community located at 3402 S. Buckner Boulevard in Dallas. Austin-based GVA Management purchased the property from Canada-based AmeriCan Multifamily Alliance Group led by Patrick and Madeleine Gergen. Chris Deuillet and William Hubbard with CBRE Capital Markets’ Investment Properties in Dallas and Jeff Kunitz and Mike Canori with CBRE Affordable Housing in Seattle represented the seller. Terms of the transaction were not disclosed. Before purchasing the property, GVA Management already had a significant presence in the Dallas-Fort Worth market as they currently own and manage over 1,200 units in multiple complexes in the area. They made the decision to purchase the property as they look to expand in the metroplex. Constructed in 1985 and 1987, Bella Vista Creek features a mix of one- and two-bedroom units and community amenities including a business center, clubhouse, swimming pool, and gated access. The buyer has plans for an extensive rehab project, giving them an opportunity for additional rental income after the LIHTC LURA expires in 2021. “Having sold the property to the current owners, I was able to see the full evolution of the property with the sellers,” said Deuillet. “We’re seeing the level of interest in larger sized multifamily properties exceed pre-COVID levels as investors can take advantage of spending the money now to see an exponential amount of reward in the future.” “Our investors were very pleased with the profits received as a result of this sale,” said Patrick Gergen, CEO of AmeriCan Multifamily Alliance Group. The property was 93 percent occupied at the time of sale.