Hartman Announces a $25,000 Scholarship Program for Employees’ Families

September 21, 2020 (HOUSTON) – Houston based commercial real estate firm Hartman Income REIT Management, Inc. (Hartman) announces The Hartman Scholarship Program for Undergraduate Students. Hartman continues its commitment to the personal development of its employees and their families by making this announcement only weeks following the company’s employee profit sharing announcement. The Hartman Scholarship Program is eligible to all dependents of full-time Hartman employees pursuing an undergraduate degree in specific fields of study at an accredited Texas college or university. Also, Hartman announced it would make the program eligible to approved dependents in specialty K-12 programs. “The growth and development of our people is truly the highest calling of leadership.” States Al Hartman, President and CEO of Hartman, “We are blessed and truly excited to allocate benevolence fund contributions not only to our employees but to their families as well.” The program is an addition to the company’s Benevolence Fund, which was established in 2016 as a way for employees to rally together and extend aid to other employees in need. The fund provides financial aid to employees with sickness and no PTO, hospital or medical-related bills, death in the immediate family, or housing and transportation emergencies. The Benevolence Fund Committee which is made up of five fellow employees and executives at Hartman, approved the allocation of $25,000 to the fund each year to award scholarships of up to $5,000 annually to each applicant. Upon learning of the newly established Hartman Scholarship Program, Marina Cuellar, a Property Manager for multiple Hartman properties in the Dallas Metroplex proudly shared “I am grateful to work for a company that doesn’t just care about their employees but cares about our families and children as well!” Melissa Arnold, who joined the company earlier this year as a Property Manager for several of the company’s properties in North Houston, stated, “I love the fact Hartman is involved in this type of giving. I have never seen it with any other company I have worked for!” Candidates must have a minimum of 3.20 cumulative GPA on a 4.0 scale and are required to maintain it through their participation in the Scholarship Program. Selected scholarship recipients will be notified of his or her status by November 15th for the spring semester and July 1st for the fall semester following his or her application. Recipients can renew their scholarship contingent upon maintaining the scholarship qualifications. The addition of The Hartman Scholarship Program to the Benevolence Fund is Hartman’s latest initiative to support employees and their families. Previous Benevolence Fund initiatives have also included situations such as major surgeries, funerals, car repairs, and legal fees.

About Hartman

Hartman is a premier property management company in the Houston, Dallas and San Antonio markets. Hartman has owned and operated commercial office properties since 1983, offering premium office space at attractive rates. With more than 37 years of commercial leasing expertise in Houston, San Antonio and Dallas, Hartman knows exactly what their customers require. For more information, visit www.hi-reit.com.

Building Out: What it Means to be LGBTQ in the Design Industry

The engine of the commercial real estate industry is people, which can often make it feel like a close-knit family. Likewise, the LGBTQ community is also very nurturing of its members. So, what are the experiences of those who fall within both groups? Insightful Chicago—which has as its mission to creates inspiring stories and conversations for women, minorities, and the LGBTQ community in the CRE industry—hosted a discussion that focused on being LGBTQ in the design industry. The panel series was hosted by the organization’s cofounders, Derek Jayson Rusch, Catie Kill and Tyler Offutt. The panelists met digitally via Zoom, sponsored by Herman Miller. The panelists were cognizant of the fact that working in the architecture and design industry—and doing so now at this point in history—affords them some level of ease, at least in comparison to other industries or even other disciplines within commercial real estate. “When I became part of the design community, it was like, ‘where has this world been all my life?’ There is a vibrance about this community,” said Todd Heiser, co-managing director of Gensler in Chicago. “Designers are a collection of misfits. I once was an outsider, but this community really brought everything together for me.” Mel Chotiner, senior interior designer at Wright Heerema Architects in Chicago, described a similar experience. One of her first jobs was with Perkins & Will and she relished the opportunity to pick the brains of the senior designers on architectural issues, personal issues and everything in between. “As an industry, we’re fortunate to be in a place where we are less of an outsider,” Chotiner said. “I’ve experienced more discrimination outside of the workplace than in it.” While the architecture and design community may be more inclusive than other professions, clients and potential clients come from all walks of life. Roger Sekol interior design practice leader in the Houston office of Perkins + Will, said that he has had to carefully manage how he comes across with some of these individuals so as not to strain a professional relationship. “Whether you are in Chicago, Houston or central Ohio, whoever the client is, I try to adjust myself based on who I’m working with,” Sekol said. “It’s a lot like clothing. You might dress differently for a tech client, for instance.” “I’ve never had to deal with conversations about people’s sexuality in this industry, whether people know I’m gay or not,” said Malisa Bryant, senior vice president and general manager at Herman Miller. “By nature of being a black woman and six feet tall I always feel like I stand out anyway.” As a woman, a person of color and a member of the LGBTQ community, Bryant said she has found herself overcompensating and at times restraining what she says so as not to cause offense among clients or industry colleagues—who are quite often white cis males. Her view now, however, is that the world had better catch up with her, not the other way around. “As I get older,” Bryant said, “I think, ‘the hell with it. I’m going to speak how I want to speak.” Neil Schneider, design director and principal at IA Chicago, said that inclusion needs to be better incorporated not just in the industry, but also in the buildings and spaces that they are designing. That includes subtle pushback on clients’ wants and needs, to help redefine what is “normal” in the built space. “The way that we design environments, they have to have an inclusive nature to them,” Schneider said. “There needs to be more dialog about restrooms, wellness centers and making space for every generation, every sexual orientation, every background.” Alex Gray, an architect in New York with Mace Group North America, had one suggestion to help push these boundaries. “A great way to convince people to do stuff is explaining how it will make them money,” he said. As an example, Gray described how New York now requires that all single-occupancy bathrooms within public and commercial properties be designated as gender-neutral, rather than male or female. He has used this as leverage with clients in other parts of the country, saying that if they incorporate the change now, they won’t have to pay to make changes later if their jurisdiction were to pass a similar ordinance. Other topics that came up included pronouns; straight colleagues who consider themselves allies of the LGBTQ community can do something as simple as include their pronouns in their email signature as a way to shift the burden away from transgender individuals. In addition to discussing their personal mentors, the panelists also acknowledged the members of the LGBTQ community who came before and help to tear down barriers that might otherwise have stood in their way. All agreed that we’ve come a long way, but there are still challenges ahead.

Suburban Houston Chick-fil-A Building Sold to Florida Buyer

JLL Capital Markets has closed the sale of a 3,354-square-foot, single-tenant retail building ground-leased to Chick-fil-A in the Houston suburb of Sugar Land, Texas. JLL marketed the property on behalf of the seller, North American Development Group. Coral Cables-based Riverstone Capital Group purchased the asset for an undisclosed sum. Headquartered in College Park, Georgia, Chick-fil-A was founded in 1946 and has grown to include more than 2,400 stores in 47 states and Washington, D.C. It is the third-largest restaurant chain in the United States in terms of sales. The Sugar Land location was constructed in 1996 and renovated in 2017. Situated on 1.08 acres at 2330 Highway 6, the retail building is within the Market at Town Center, a 2,265-acre, master-planned development and employment center in Sugar Land. The property is surrounded by 1,655 multi-housing units, three hospitals, three million square feet of office space and 4.2 million square feet of retail space. The JLL Capital Markets team representing the seller was led by senior managing director Brad Peterson, senior director Whitaker Leonhardt, directors Michael Brewster and John Indelli and Analysts Tommy Isola and Aziza Rehmatulla. “Chick-fil-A is special because of its excellent product, top-notch customer service and high-volume drive throughs,” Brewster said. “It’s no surprise that the company maintains such strong operations because its franchisee selection process is 30 times more selective than Harvard admissions.”

Hines Launches Multifamily Property Management Firm, Willowick Residential

Hines has launched Willowick Residential, a multifamily property management firm that will work in partnership with the firm’s rapidly growing multifamily portfolio of 63 projects across 38 U.S. cities, including luxury towers, urban mid-rises and traditional garden-style apartments. The company is named after founder Gerald D. Hines’ first multifamily residential building in Houston’s River Oaks area, Willowick Residential. In the early days of his firm, Mr. Hines managed The Willowick himself, believing that an owner had greater insight and desire to manage a building properly. “Rooted in the expertise of our regional offices, our growing and successful multifamily division has expanded for-rent apartment development activity throughout the United States,” said Jeff Hines, president and CEO of Hines. “Willowick Residential seeks to deliver a superior level of resident service, above-industry retention rates, cost-effective building management and superior engineering and maintenance of the physical asset.” Launched earlier this year, Willowick Residential is currently managing nine properties—two in the DFW market, five near Houston and two in the Chicago metro. The venture’s competencies include acquisition services, advisory services, engineering and maintenance, team member recruiting and development, lease-up and transition services, marketing and communications, reputation management, market analysis and research, vendor compliance and information technology.