Everett's Surprising Allure
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Everett's Surprising Allure

Snohomish County is getting attention from investors. Six months after its first acquisition in Everett, Lowe Enterprises Investors snapped up the 264-unit North Creek Apartments at 11401 3rd Ave SE in a JV. (Competition for Snohomish is no longer limited to those who can pronounce it.)

LEI SVP Andy Sands tells us that the firm became well acquainted with the Everett market when it bought Covington Farms. What the company found out: “Everett's a tight submarket with no new construction underway, unlike downtown Seattle, Bellevue, and the surrounding communities,” Andy says.

Everett's a not just a good place to buy housing, Andy adds, it's a good place to buy workforce housing. It has a solid employment base "anchored by Boeing, Naval Station Everett and the Port of Everett,” he says. So LEI wants properties that can be updated yet will remain affordable to the local workforce, because many other properties being developed in Puget Sound urban markets are out of reach, Andy explains. Built in 1989, the garden-style property is 95% occupied.

Everett-based Windermere Commercial NW prez Ronald Thompson agrees that multifamily is still the hottest investment property type in Everett and the surrounding area, but office and retail are on the rise. “Commercial vacancies in Snohomish are still relatively high: 15% in office, retail in the same range,” he tells us, but investors are thinking about the long term, as fundamentals improve. There's a lot of demand for net-leased properties, but not as much supply, since owners are hanging on to their properties, he adds. Few other investments offer a better return.

Efforts are underway to guide the county's workforce toward advanced manufacturing facilities. Next month, Everett Community College is opening its Advanced Manufacturing Technology and Education Center. Look for more skilled workers in machining, welding, engineering tech, and composites, ECC dean-aerospace & advanced manufacturing Sheila Dunn tells us. (Which means also look for some of the slickest pinewood derby cars once these guys and gals get settled.) Sheila adds, “The new training center will provide students with the opportunity to learn first-hand the manufacturing process.”

  
  
SMPS (NextEvent4) SEA
Relay Partners (Condos)
Bury (Vision) SEA

Don't Miss Bisnow's Green Building Event Aug. 27!

Will climate change affect developers? That's just one of many hot topics at Bisnow's Sustainability: The Green Building Revolution event at the Four Seasons on Aug. 27. “Sustainability is becoming a driving force for Fortune-sector leaders, Paladino & Co CEO Tom Paladino (above, certainly enjoying the weather) tells us. And addressing green economy trends like responsible enterprise and work-life integration will change the way development teams think about commercial real estate forever.” Our event will feature sustainable experts from DLR Group, Google, the GSA, PAE, the City of Seattle, Unico, Vulcan, and keynotes from the National Trust for Historic Preservation's Mark Huppert and Daniels Real Estate's Kevin Daniels. Sign up here.


Old School Amenities That Matter

Even in tech-oriented Bellevue, non-tech amenities are hot, KBS Strategic Opportunity REIT SVP Jeff Rader tells us. The company has been upgrading common areas recently, and even opened a new amenity building on the campus that includes a fitness center, cafe, conference facilities, and indoor bike storage. Hitachi and Regus reupped for more than 80k SF recently at the Bellevue Technology Center, which is owned by KBS, a SoCal investor.


Last Night with Bisnow's 50 NYC Power Women!

Over 400 packed into our Bisnow NYC Power Women awards last night on West 26th in the Big Apple, as we celebrated 50 remarkable players who've shaped New York City (check our series: Part 1, Part 2, Part 3, Part 4, and Part 5). This was the third series and party after DC and Dallas this year. And there's more to come—in Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, and LA. Last night's honorees included the likes of CBRE's Mary Ann Tighe, whom we named last year the No. 1 broker in New York, Vornado EVP Wendy Silverstein, Douglas Elliman "queen of retail" Faith Hope Consolo, and Forest City Ratner CEO MaryAnne Gilmartin, among many other notables.

MaryAnne leads the charge at mega-development Pacific Park Brooklyn (nee Atlantic Yards) and oversees the firm's 16.7M SF across 42 buildings. Twenty years after she joined the firm, one year since she took over for Bruce Ratner, and six weeks after the company closed on a massive equity infusion from Greenland Group for Pacific Park Brooklyn, she is in the key position of determining what her company can and should do next. She came to NYC as an urban fellow and worked in economic development under mayors Koch and Dinkins, then Bruce recruited her after she helped bring Bear Stearns to his MetroTech Center in Brooklyn. Her breakout: Midtown's NY Times Building, which she got done through the slow period after 9/11.


Don't Miss Sustainability:
The Green Building Revolution

Just when you thought Seattle couldn't get any greener, hear how that's possible at Bisnow's SustainabilityThe Green Building Revolution at the Four Seasons Seattle on Aug. 27. Daniels Real Estate's Kevin Daniels and the National Trust for Historic Perservation's Mark Huppert will keynote. Other panelists will include DLR Group's Jason Dardis and Amarprett Sethi, Google's Mike Nolan, the GSA's Don Horn, PAE's Allan Montpellior, the City of Seattle's Sandra Mallory, Unico's Brett Phillips, and Vulcan's Brandon Morgan. Sign up today!


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 $59, or purchase all five videos for $199. Order yours here, and for training program group licenses, email Will Friend at will@bisnow.com.

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RIP, Robin. Na-nu na-nu. Send ideas and suggestions to dees.stribling@bisnow.com 

 
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