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Ups and downs

Compared with the previous two years, 2022 was less of a roller coaster for the housing market in Virginia, but it still presented challenges for many would-be first-time homebuyers.

As inflation rates grew, peaking at a 40-year high of 9.1% in June 2022, the Federal Reserve increased interest rates rapidly. Inflation fell to 6.5% in December 2022, but the higher rates put the brakes on the housing market in Virginia with an abrupt screech.

Over the course of 2022, 123,000 homes sold statewide, about 20% less than in 2021 but closer to pre-pandemic activity, according to Virginia Realtors. The sharpest declines were seen in Northern and Central Virginia. Bidding wars were less common last year than during the height of the pandemic, but it still wasn’t a great market for buyers, as the state’s median sales price jumped about $25,000 to $375,000 in December 2022, compared with December 2021.

However, in February, mortgage rates started to decline, prompting renewed demand. According to a Wall Street Journal report, the average 30-year home loan rate has come down by nearly a full percentage point from a 20-year high above 7% in November 2022 — although that’s still double the 3% rates from November 2021. 

On the commercial side, many large-scale projects are now in the works across the state. In Richmond, the ball is rolling on the $2.44 billion Diamond District mixed-use development centered around a new baseball stadium for the Richmond Flying Squirrels, set to be completed in time for the 2025 baseball season.

At the end of 2022, the Richmond Economic Development Authority and the Greater Richmond Convention Center Authority received five proposals from developers to redevelop the City Center Innovation District, a 9.4-acre downtown area that includes the closed Richmond Coliseum, which the city wants demolished. A 10-person evaluation panel is scheduled to narrow the group of five during the first quarter of this year.

In Hampton Roads, two of famed entertainer and Virginia Beach native Pharrell Williams’ larger projects made progress in 2022: the $1.1 billion redevelopment of Military Circle Mall in Norfolk and the $350 million Atlantic Park project in Virginia Beach.

Negotiations started last year, but as of late January, Williams’ Wellness Circle team had not yet officially signed documents to redevelop Military Circle Mall, which would include 1,100 residential units, a 200-room hotel and a 16,000-seat arena. In November 2022, the music superstar prodded Norfolk leaders to move forward with the project, saying “The ball’s in their court.”

Meanwhile, the Oceanfront-based Atlantic Park, Williams’ surf park project with Virginia Beach-based Venture Realty Group, secured pending financing in January and is getting closer to groundbreaking, with completion set for summer 2024. The first phase includes 120,000 square feet of retail, 310,000 square feet of residential and 15,000 square feet of office space.

Northern Virginia is seeing massive development along the Silver Line’s Loudoun County extension, which opened in November 2022 after an eight-year delay. Reston Town Center, which has 5.1 million square feet of office space, is set to add 700,000 to 800,000 square feet more in the next few years, part of a $3 billion investment by Boston Properties Inc., and developer Comstock Inc. is busy building 7 million square feet of offices and residential space at Reston Station. The company has plans for 2.5 million square feet of multiuse space at Loudoun Station in Ashburn.

In Danville, the long-awaited White Mill project broke ground in early 2023. The $100 million public-private redevelopment of the 550,000-square-foot former textile mill, now known as Dan River Falls, is a joint venture between the city’s industrial development authority and The Alexander Co. It will have 147,000 square feet of commercial space and 150 apartments geared toward employees of the forthcoming Caesars Virginia casino.  

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Warehouse portfolio with two Va. properties sells for $21.86M

Seven warehouses leased to Lansing Building Products, including two in Virginia, sold for $21.86 million, Cushman & Wakefield | Thalhimer announced Friday.

The portfolio of warehouses totals 209,883 square feet, and the properties range from 20,000 to almost 50,000 square feet each. On average, 89% of each property is warehouse, and 11% is office space. The tenant, Lansing Building Products, supplies exterior building products to contractors and has more than 2,000 employees.

The two Virginia properties are in Newport News and Norfolk. The 47,664-square-foot warehouse in Newport News is located at 12661 McManus Blvd. The 40,050-square-foot Norfolk warehouse is located at 3644 Village Ave.

New Jersey-based B&D Holdings bought the properties. Eric Robison with Cushman & Wakefield | Thalhimer’s Capital Markets Group and Rett Turner with Thalhimer’s Global Occupier Services Multi-Market Team represented the seller. Lansing entities owned the Virginia properties, property records show.

The other warehouses were in Statesville and Wilmington, North Carolina; Oklahoma City; Myrtle Beach, South Carolina; and Ogden, Utah.

Midlothian luxury apartment complex begins construction

Bainbridge Cos. has started construction in Chesterfield County on the 310-unit Bainbridge Midlothian luxury apartment complex, the Florida-based multifamily real estate company announced in mid-February.

Bainbridge estimates the approximately 26.3-acre project at 12400 Dutton Road will be complete next summer. Units will range from 700 to 1,560 square feet, with one-, two- and three-bedroom options.

The company purchased the property in June 2022, Chesterfield County property records show. Bainbridge bought seven lots totaling 21.8 acres for $820,000. It paid $200,000 for the remaining 4.48 acres at 12231 Old Buckingham Road.

Located near the Walmart Supercenter and Sam’s Club stores on Midlothian Turnpike, the complex will have a pool and sundeck, a clubhouse with work-from-home spaces, a fitness center, a pickleball court, a pet spa and outdoor amenities including a dog park.

“Bainbridge Midlothian is an exciting milestone for our company, as it officially marks our entrance into the Richmond, Virginia, market,” Greg Cavanaugh, Bainbridge senior vice president of mid-Atlantic development, said in a statement.

Since its founding in 1997, Bainbridge has developed and acquired more than 43,000 rental homes representing $7.5 billion in transactions. The company has more than 650 employees. Based in Wellington, Florida, Bainbridge has additional offices in Florida, Georgia, North Carolina, Texas and Washington, D.C.

Newport News warehouse sells for $2.65M

A warehouse in Newport News sold for $2.65 million, Cushman & Wakefield | Thalhimer announced Wednesday.

Located at 1011 and 1031 44th St., the 30,000-square-foot industrial building sits on 3.55 acres. The land is currently being used for a wholesale distribution facility, according to Newport News property records. Three tenants split the facility: Hampton Roads Transit’s Handi-Rides, equipment manufacturer Liebherr USA Co. and infrastructure construction company MasTec, according to Clay Culbreth, a senior vice president with Thalhimer.

1031 44th Street LLC purchased the property from L & F Holdings LLC. The buyer has no immediate plans beyond maintaining the current leases, according to Culbreth, who represented the seller.

Roanoke shopping center sells for $4.8M

A shopping center in Roanoke has changed hands.

Salem-based Omma Management LLC purchased the 49,881-square-foot Oak Grove Plaza in Roanoke for $4.8 million, Cushman & Wakefield | Thalhimer announced.

Built in 1964, Oak Grove Plaza is located at 2061 Electric Road. CXL Inc. sold the property, which is on about four acres. Cushman & Wakefield | Thalhimer will continue to provide leasing and management services for the plaza.

Tenants in the shopping center include McDonald’s Corp., T-Mobile USA Inc., pizza and barbecue restaurants, an ice cream shop, a custard shop, a nail salon, a rug store and others.

William D. Poe, of Cushman & Wakefield | Thalhimer, handled the sale negotiations on behalf of the seller.

$130M mixed-use development planned for Hampton

A proposed $130 million development will bring 118 townhomes, 284 luxury apartments, 96 senior apartments and 6,000 square feet of retail space to Hampton.

The project, called The Olde Hampton Village, will span 16 parcels across nearly 23 acres near downtown Hampton, at the former site of the Lincoln Park housing development, on LaSalle Avenue, off Interstate 64 and near Langley Air Force Base and NASA Langley.

The former housing development closed and was demolished in 2016, according to the city’s staff report on the project. The proposal went in front of Hampton City Council on Wednesday night, seeking rezoning and use permits, and earned the council’s approval.

The Olde Hampton Village is a joint venture between Virginia Beach-based Axis Global Enterprises Inc. and Virginia Beach-based EDC Homes, and has been in the works for four years, according to a news release from the developer.

A rendering shows the pool and clubhouse area.
Courtesy Axis Global Enterprises Inc.

The townhomes would each be three stories and the developers are proposing four multifamily buildings, each four stories high. The development will also have park space, a pool, a dog park and washing station, a clubhouse and a fitness center. It could also include a child care facility, hair salon and coffee shop.

The developers expect to break ground on the project in late summer 2023, after all site and building plans are approved and finalized. The project will be built in phases and is expected to be completed in 28 months,  a spokesperson for Axis told Virginia Business.

“The Olde Hampton Village development is an opportunity to revitalize the gateway to the Olde Hampton community, which is rich in history for our region,” Ross Vierra, president and CEO of Axis Global Enterprises, said in a statement.  “Bringing this vision to life has been a long road which we have been dedicated to ensuring the highest quality designs to honor the heritage and inspire a new generation of residents and businesses. Service is at the heart of our development process and this vote from the Hampton City Council permits our team to bring this transformational gateway project to life.”

The site was once a Hampton Redevelopment and Housing Authority housing project that was too old to rehabilitate, according to a news release from the city. The housing authority has approved the sale of the land.

 

‘Flight to quality’

When Jessica Bronner wants to meet up with friends for a drink or meal, she doesn’t have to move her car from the garage at Ink, the luxury apartment building where she lives in Richmond’s trendy Scott’s Addition neighborhood.

Developed by Glen Allen-based Capital Square and completed in January 2022, the 80-unit Ink is one of the newest luxury apartment communities to rise in the area.

“Scott’s Addition is a booming area, and it’s close to everything, and that’s what drew me here,” says Bronner.

Plus, as a previous homeowner, she has no interest in taking on a mortgage again anytime soon.

“I don’t think it’s super-affordable for anyone 20 to 35 to buy a house unless they’re married or someone else is financially contributing,” she says. “I know I couldn’t afford to buy a house right now on my own.”

Bronner, 30, who owns a commercial flooring sales business, is part of a growing demographic of young, affluent adults who are — at least for now — eschewing the idea of home ownership as too expensive. Instead, they’re turning to apartment communities like Ink that provide a mix of high-end amenities and convenience.

Luxury apartment buildings with high density and high rents are popping up in some of Virginia’s most populated areas at a record pace. Multifamily developers are targeting stylish, in-demand neighborhoods such as Richmond’s Scott’s Addition and Arlington County’s National Landing, fueling fast growth of Class A apartment spaces.

As of late December 2022, multifamily inventory in Northern Virginia was 218,140 units, up about 3,000 from the end of 2021. It’s projected to get to 225,459 by the end of 2023, according to data from Washington, D.C.-based CoStar Group Inc., a commercial real estate data and analytics provider. Nearly all the new construction is Class A, or luxury apartments, according to CoStar.

“If you think about the supply side, developers have been moving into multifamily for a variety of reasons,” says Kevin Boyle, Willis Blackwood director of Virginia Tech’s Blackwood Department of Real Estate. “One relates to good demand [for] housing and a shortage of supply satisfying that. Another factor is there is money to be invested, and where are you going to invest it? Multifamily has been, for a long time, a relatively safe investment.” 

Other factors feeding the demand for luxury units include a shortage of available homes for sale, as well as higher home prices and interest rates.

“There are people likely priced out of the homeownership market and [who] may not have that down payment ready and are opting to rent a bit longer,” says Ryan Price, chief economist for Virginia Realtors. “A lot of people are voluntarily pushing pause or getting priced out.” 

In November 2022, there were 6,057 pending home sales in Virginia, nearly 4,000 fewer than the same period in 2021, according to a report from Virginia Realtors.

Additionally, home prices have risen dramatically since the pandemic, and there is a dearth of “starter home price points” in the market, Price says. In November 2022, the statewide median sales price was $364,900, about 2.6% higher than the year before. Combined with higher interest rates — hovering around 6% to 7% — it’s putting the brakes on the housing market.

But rental prices are skyrocketing as well. Average rents in Arlington rose from $2,219 in the first quarter of 2020 to $2,356 at the beginning of 2023, with rents in National Landing rising from $2,348 to $2,492 during the same period, according to data from CoStar Group. In Richmond, average rents have risen from $1,165 to $1,347 since 2020, and Scott’s Addition has seen rents climb from $1,536 to $1,721.

Most new multifamily development in Virginia is higher end because the rising cost of construction and materials makes it difficult to build profitable multifamily communities below that level of quality, says Mike Cobb Jr., director of market analytics with CoStar Group. 

Says Virginia Tech’s Boyle: “While there is a huge need for affordable [housing], the margin on them is not as high and the management challenges can be higher.”

Zom Living is building Hazel & Azure, two high-rise apartment towers with a total of 491 units, in Arlington. Rendering courtesy Zom Living

“What developers are doing, whether it’s in Virginia or across the country, is building into this flight to quality,” says Cobb.

As used by the commercial real estate industry lately, the term “flight to quality” is a common one, referring not only to developers flocking toward high-end, high-profit properties, but also consumers such as the affluent young professionals who are gravitating toward rentals with premium features. 

“You have all those amenities right there,” says Boyle. “I think it is kind of falling into that category of people that want something they don’t have to maintain but also want to have those amenities available to them.” 

In-demand perks include gyms, pools, dog parks, bicycle repair stations, coworking spaces, rooftop spaces, urban views, community gathering spots and proximity to transit, grocery stores, retail and restaurants.

Ink resident Craig Rollyson, 29, says renting is a better fit for him than buying. He recently moved to Richmond to be an occupational therapist and was drawn to Ink and its “clean, cool vibe,” he says.

“Before I want to put roots down, I have some fact-finding to do first,” Rollyson says. “Renting, there is not as much of a commitment. There is certainly some flexibility there that is appealing.”

NoVa luxury boom

National Landing is seeing a wave of high-end apartment development, driven by Amazon.com Inc.’s multibillion-dollar HQ2 East Coast headquarters, which is under development in the neighborhood, as well as Virginia Tech’s $1 billion-plus Innovation Campus, which is under construction in nearby Alexandria. The extension of Metro’s Silver Line is also boosting development. 

“We already liked the neighborhood, [but] development was happening there much slower than what’s happening today and … Amazon … really supercharged interest by us and many, many other developers,” says Andrew Cretal, senior vice president of Florida-based Zom Living, which is developing the Hazel & Azure luxury apartment buildings, 15 and 11 stories apiece, in National Landing.

Launched in April 2022 and slated for completion by mid-2024, the $235 million project will have 491 units, with rents ranging from $2,225 for a 548-square-foot studio apartment to $5,780 for a 1,688-square-foot penthouse unit.

Zom’s target audience for Hazel & Azure is 25- to 35-year-old professionals, both singles and couples, as well as middle-aged professionals who have chosen not to purchase a home or who are living in the area temporarily, Cretal says.

“Our project will also appeal to empty nesters who desire the carefree lifestyle a Class A apartment affords,” he says. “The location near U.S. Route 1 and I-395 will appeal to residents who work in Arlington, Alexandria, the District of Columbia and other locations in the Washington metro area, including couples with split work locations. Clearly Amazon employees are included in this, as well as other nearby employers.”

Bethesda, Maryland-based developer JBG Smith Properties, the primary developer for Amazon’s HQ2, has 1,583 units under construction in National Landing across two $765 million luxury multifamily projects.

1900 Crystal Drive, which has 808 apartments spread across two 26- and 27-story towers, broke ground in March 2021 and is scheduled for completion in 2024. Another project, 19- and 25-story towers with a combined 775 units at 2000 and 2001 S. Bell St., broke ground in 2022 and is slated to deliver in 2025.

Another area with a high concentration of luxury apartments under construction is the Dulles corridor, where Reston-based Comstock Holding Companies Inc., developer of Reston Station, has several projects in development. Comstock has developed about 10 million square feet of transit-oriented and mixed-use properties, including along Metro’s Silver Line.

“I think we are probably the most prolific developers along the Silver Line,” says Chris Clemente, Comstock’s CEO and chairman of the board of directors. “It’s because people want to live here [and] … want to live in the best new product.”

For more than a decade, Comstock has been developing Blvd, a luxury multifamily apartment brand, in Fairfax and Loudoun counties. The newest properties in the collection are Blvd Hadley at Reston Row with 420 luxury apartments planned, Blvd Gramercy West at Loudoun with 270 units and Blvd Midline at Reston Station with 250 units. All three will have studio, one- and two-bedroom apartments, with the Loudoun community also offering three-bedroom options.

Capital Square Co-CEOs Whitson Huffman (L) and Louis Rogers led development of Ink, one of five apartment communities the real estate investment firm has built in the Scott’s Addition area of Richmond. Photo by Matthew R.O. Brown
Capital Square Co-CEOs Whitson Huffman (L) and Louis Rogers led development of Ink, one of five apartment communities the real estate investment firm has built in the Scott’s Addition area of Richmond. Photo by Matthew R.O. Brown

A similar story

About 100 miles south of Arlington, a similar story is playing out in the Richmond market. At the end of 2021, there were about 95,000 apartments in the region. Another 3,000 were expected to come online by the end of 2022, and the forecast for 2023 jumps to 101,540, according to CoStar data. The majority of this new multifamily construction is Class A, according to CoStar.

Since early 2020, about 8,600 units have been delivered in the Richmond area, increasing market inventory by about 10%. Another 6,200 units are currently under construction, with an additional 8,700 planned for the near future, says Liz Greving, research manager with Cushman & Wakefield | Thalhimer, a commercial real estate company with offices around the mid-Atlantic.

One of the neighborhoods seeing a lot of development is Scott’s Addition. Barely a decade ago, it was a declining industrial district. Now, it’s a hotspot for millennials and Gen-Zers.

Between 2020 and 2022, Capital Square built Ink, Viv and Gem, a collection of three five-story luxury apartment buildings, with a total of 209 apartments. Two more are in various stages of development: six-story Otis, with 350 units, was delivered in January, and another 350-unit development with three buildings will be finished in 2025. All of these apartments are 600 to 1,400 square feet and rent from about $1,500 to $3,800, ranging from studios to one-, two- and three-bedrooms.

Across its five developments in Scott’s Addition, Capital Square has invested more than $260 million.

“It’s just a cool place to live,” Capital Square co-CEO Louis Rogers says of Scott’s Addition. “In our experience, more than half the residents are coming in from out of state … [and] it resembles neighborhoods in big cities. People like that.” 

Co-CEO Whitson Huffman adds that they have delivered buildings “that had different personalities and design aesthetics that would specifically target different segments of Scott’s Addition’s broader demographic. We thought there was an untapped segment of the market looking for higher end finishes, unit design and amenities.”

Also under development in the neighborhood is Crescent Communities’ Novel Scott’s Addition, a five-story, 275-unit complex that will be renting in a similar price range for studios to two-bedrooms.

“As a Class A developer, you’re always going to chase employment and population growth. You’re going to go where there are new jobs and new employment,” says Brandon Wright, Crescent Communities’ managing director for Washington, D.C., Virginia and Maryland.

As with Scott’s Addition and National Landing, population growth and job growth are also driving luxury apartment development in western Chesterfield and Henrico counties, says CoStar’s Cobb.

From Willow Lawn west in Henrico, about 2,440 units, many of them luxury, are under construction, with more than 1,700 additional units proposed. In Chesterfield’s Midlothian area, about 1,200 units are under construction and another 900 are proposed. 

But the boom won’t last forever. 

Wright, with Crescent, says developers are going into 2023 with “eyes wide open, knowing we will have challenges on the financial front.”

That includes rising construction and labor costs, labor shortages, supply chain disruptions and other economic headwinds across the board for the industry, including the potential for recession.

Adds Boyle: “I think that multifamily across all different product types is probably reaching the peak of this development.” 

Norfolk’s MacArthur Center mall listed for sale

Downtown Norfolk’s struggling mall, MacArthur Center, is officially on the market.

A listing from real estate company JLL describes the 23-acre property as “a compelling redevelopment opportunity.” The listing encourages prospective buyers to “reimagine a major asset in the Norfolk [central business district] into a premier mixed-use development to include hotel, residential, restaurant and entertainment uses.”

The property includes 914,751 square feet of leasable area. Current mall anchors are Dillards, with 253,616 square feet, and Regal Cinemas, with 80,210 square feet. Another 160,000-square-foot anchor spot is vacant. Those three anchor spaces account for 493,826 square feet, or about 54% of the total space at the mall, which also has a multistory parking garage with about 4,000 spaces.

Originally built in 1999, the mall has lost many of its tenants, including anchor Nordstrom in April 2019, after 20 years. An Apple Store left in 2021 and more recently, restaurants Texas de Brazil and California Pizza Kitchen departed.

The mall is now 62% vacant, according to JLL.

In the brochure marketing the mall, JLL writes that the site could potentially support 200,000 square feet of ground floor space and more than 800,000 square feet of mixed-use space, including residential uses.

Starwood Property Trust bought the mall in 2014 for $265.5 million from Michigan-based Taubman Centers Inc., as part of a purchase of seven regional shopping malls for $1.4 billion. But Starwood defaulted on a $750 million loan in 2019, and MacArthur Center is now owned by Wells Fargo and managed by Syracuse, New York-based Spinoso Real Estate Group. The city owns the land the mall sits on at 300 Monticello Ave. and has a leasehold interest.

JLL’s listing does not include an asking price for the mall, but in July 2022, MacArthur Center was assessed at about $51.8 million, including $24.8 million for the land, according to city records.

A re-envisioning of the mall was included in Norfolk’s Downtown 2030 plan, a guide for development into the next decade.

Norfolk officials are encouraged about what the mall could become.

“We are hopeful that this move is the first step in reimagining the MacArthur Center property,” Norfolk City Manager Larry “Chip” Filer said in a statement. “The city looks forward to working in partnership with any potential new owners should the property sell.”

Norfolk Mayor Kenny Alexander echoed the sentiment.

“Whatever is decided in the reimagination, I hope the new buyers take into consideration Norfolk’s history and its character,” he told Virginia Business. “It’s a grand opportunity for transformation and for reimagining. All of that will be taken into consideration. We look forward to partnering and making the best and highest use a reality.”

“Certainly the city will be at the table in the discussions and cultivate that reimagination of that facility and the property.”

 

 

 

 

 

 

Petersburg industrial building sells for $4.6M

An industrial building in Petersburg that once served as the tri-cities headquarters for Pepsi has sold for about $4.6 million, One South Commercial announced Wednesday.

An entity connected with Waukeshaw Development Inc. in Petersburg sold the 100,492-square-foot building located at 1501 W. Washington St. in Petersburg to 1501 Petersburg LLC, an entity based in McLean. The industrial building, which includes close to 100,000 square feet of leased warehouse space and 8,500 square feet of office space, is on 8.52 acres, according to One South.

Tom Rosman, Ken Campbell and Ryan Rilee, all of One South Commercial, represented the seller.

Former EAB buildings in Henrico sell for $5.35M

A Richmond-based real estate company has purchased three office buildings in western Henrico County for $5.35 million, Commonwealth Commercial Partners LLC announced Monday.

Formerly the headquarters of education research company EAB, the buildings are located at 1910, 1920 and 1950 E. Parham Drive. Marwaha Property Management, doing business as Marwaha Business Park LLC, purchased the buildings from SIR Properties Trust, a Henrico real estate developer. The buildings are 33,900 square feet, 28,800 square feet and 26,190 square feet.

In June 2022, EAB announced it would expand and relocate, consolidating its operations into another space in Henrico.

The buyer plans to rebrand the vacant complex Marwaha Property Management, according to Commonwealth’s announcement. Marwaha manages commercial and residential real estate across Virginia, and it plans to relocate its office into one of the buildings and lease the other two to other tenants.

Tucker Dowdy and Michael Good, both of Commonwealth Commercial, represented the buyer in the transaction.