Seven Silicon Valley Stories To Watch
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Seven Silicon Valley Stories To Watch

We got Cushman's San Jose office to tell us about the best water cooler gossip in Silicon Valley right now. (Don't worry we didn't tell them that gossip we know about you...)

1) Office is Tight and Rates Are High

That's the story in Mountain View, Palo Alto, and Sunnyvale. Cushman senior analyst Sethena Leiker has been crunching Peninsula and Silicon Valley stats for Cushman since 2011, following two years at a competing firm. There isn't a lot of available spec inventory that is going to deliver in the next two years that isn't already pre-leased. (Here she's with the brokerage's March Madness bracket, their annual event that raised $20,500 this year to benefit Make-A-Wish Foundation.) At least two biggies won't be in the leasing game as much; with Samsung and Apple building their respective campuses, they will likely cool down in their new campuses upon construction completion.

2) The New Office Worker

Above, Cushman associate director Jason Palda and senior director Rich Hardy, who work with a good mix of tech tenants. While Silicon Valley offices are planting flags in S.F., says Rich, S.F.-based workers don't want to be outside of the Valley HQ 100% of the time. That's because employees need that important face time with executives who can pull them along in their careers. They perhaps want to be in one place more than another for lifestyle reasons but they don't want to disappear from management and their radar screens. He knows S.F.-based Yelp is actively looking for some Valley space and is rumored to be very close to signing a deal in Palo Alto.

3) The Rise of Santa Clara

There's a lot attracting users to Santa Clara aside from Levi's Stadium (Silicon Valley Power and asking rates trailing northern submarkets are two). Retail and development projects still in the planning process from Related and Joe Montana are sure to drive more interest. Around the stadium is a four-to-six block radius that's going through a massive redevelopment, says Jason. Rich expects Santa Clara to become the true epicenter of Silicon Valley once development takes shape (historically, it's been Palo Alto). Another change? The Valley has long consisted of one-and-two-story sprawling campuses, says Rich, and only recently has it started to go upward instead of outward.

4) What's Hot in San Jose

Downtown San Jose has picked up and will continue to do so, says Sethena. (Above, San Jose Mayor Chuck Reed speaking at Bisnow's recent Silicon Valley event.) There's a lot of high-density housing delivering in the next year or two and it is currently the only real transit hub (a rare Valley perk). South San Jose is gaining the interest of true R&D tenants with lower-cost available space. During the last year there have been rumors of big tenants in the works; those transactions have yet to take place but there seems to be touring activity that could translate to real leases in the near future. In North San Jose, lots of asset repositioning is happening, giving tenants a lower-cost option than Santa Clara.

5) Industrial Space is Scarce

Much of what's available is dated, which would take some serious cash to bring it back to functioning product. This year, all eyes were on the brand new 574k SF Cherry Logistics Center in Newark, which is no longer an option (we reported on Amazon leasing the whole thing). Fremont's Milmont Commerce Center is delivering in the next few quarters, and Sethena is surprised that hasn't been pre-leased yet. Despite Silicon tech companies wanting to plunk manufacturing near office and R&D, they now have to look further away in East Bay.

6) Google is an Under-Told Story

The search engine giant is aggressively purchasing—and leasing—property in Mountain View, Palo Alto, and Sunnyvale. (Google just paid $98M for nine buildings in Mountain View.) Some of what Google is scooping up is under CBRE Global Investors, which isn't disclosing who it's buying on behalf of. But if you look at the acquisition path on a map it's pretty obvious it's for Google, Sethena says. She doesn't expect Google to occupy a lot of what it's buying in their current states, so expect a lot of redevelopment plays.

7) Displacement of Service Businesses

Google is buying old service center buildings on Charleston and Leghorn, with the long-term goal of converting those sites into housing for employees. Rich recently had a roofer doing work on his house and saw the Mountain View address on his card. Turns out Google had bought the roofer's building and he's going to have to move elsewhere. The industrial service sector base is quickly disappearing, and the big question is where it's going to go. Contracting businesses need to find cheap space—and a lot of it—so that's going to be an issue.

  
  
Allen Matkins (Survey-man) SV
UMI (TurningPoint) SV
Turner (Teamwork-Integrity) SV
Bury (Vision) SV
Bisnow (Niche-White) HALF
CohnReznick (Field) SV

North First Campus LEED-ing The Pack

North First Campus, a 1.8M SF, 43-acre master-planned office campus being developed by Lowe Enterprises and an affiliate of Five Mile Capital Partners, was just pre-certified for LEED for Neighborhood Development. Why is that a big deal? It's the first plan in Silicon Valley to get the title and one of seven in the state. Across from VTA Component Light-Rail Station, North First Campus will have nine buildings ranging from 150k SF to 350k SF with big floor plates (up to 42k SF). Typical high-tech tenants in the Valley would be good fits, and the configuration would work well for full-building users, says Lowe head of NorCal activities Alan Chamorro.

The layout of S.F.'s Fillmore and Union streets serve as inspiration for the campus. The buildings will be brought close to the streets to get that urban feel, and open spaces on rooftops, balconies, and next to buildings will encourage outdoor activities and events (think a farmer's market, live entertainment, food trucks, basketball, and tennis courts). Construction could start in three months, with an 18-month turnaround timetable. Alan, above with the fam in central Sierra Nevada, is also busy working on the 9.5-acre JV with Montana next to Levi's Stadium. Tomorrow, there's a project scoping meeting for the Environmental Impact Report.


5th Bisnow Video

With Bisnow Education's latest video, Real Estate and Their Asset Classes, we drill down to fine-point dynamics of the industry itself, explaining vital differences among the many opportunities (economic and otherwise) commercial real estate has to offer. Peter Linneman, Wharton's real estate program founder and chairman, continues to share his extensive knowledge of how real estate sectors differ in operating, organizing and providing revenue, including:

  • Differences among Class-A, B and C properties.
  • Risks associated with retail hotel types (the differences are significant)
  • Shifts of demand within multifamily
  • Strip centers vs. power centers
  • The Internet challenge
  • And more

This is our latest video and video No. 5 in our hugely popular educational series, with more to come. This one contains two-and-a-half hours of useful information, but it can be digested in bite-sized, five-minute spoonfuls that go down easy (watch a sample here). It's available to Bisnow readers for only $99, or purchase all five videos for $199. Order yours here, and for training program group licenses, email Will Friend at will@bisnow.com.

Bisnow (video-AssetClasses)

Stay tuned for the rest of our Future of the Waterfront coverage tomorrow. tierney.plumb@bisnow.com.

 
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