The property where Camping World is located in Hanover County has been sold for $19.4 million, Colliers announced Monday.
Camping World is at 11525 Sunshade Lane on 30.16 acres with 1,650 feet of Interstate 95 frontage, south of the town of Ashland. It serves as the company’s East Coast flagship location.
EMAC LLC bought the property from Boston-based Northbridge, a vertically-integrated industrial owner, operator and developer.
Will Bradley, Mark Williford and David Wilkins, all of Colliers, represented the seller.
In April 2020, Savan Group LLC, a federal contractor specializing in digital transformation, information technology and management consulting, gave up its 10,500-square-foot office space in Tysons.
Like many other companies, Savan Group shifted to remote work due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but by summer 2021, company President and CEO Veeral Majmudar was ready to look at returning workers to the office.
“Being in the consulting business … some level of engagement amongst our colleagues was important,” Majmudar says. “That’s how our business thrives — the sharing of ideas and communication. And while we can do a lot of that virtually, you do lose a little bit when you’re not able to meet in person.”
Working with leasing agency Ethos Tenant Co., Majmudar found a “plug-and-play,” fully furnished 17,500-square-foot office in Tysons that Savan Group secured via sublease at a steeply discounted rate.
It was an “opportunistic” move made possible by shifting dynamics of the commercial real estate market as many companies are “shifting and downsizing,” he says.
More than two years after the pandemic upended working norms, Virginia companies continue to reevaluate their commercial real estate needs. It’s been a slow and sometimes frustrating process. Just when some companies have been ready to return workers to the office, even on a hybrid basis, COVID-19 has surged, throwing a wrench into long-term plans. The pivot to hybrid and remote work, now a permanent fixture for many companies, has had landlords and tenants scrambling to figure out how it will impact the office market.
More empty space in 2021
Real estate experts say Virginia had higher vacancy rates in 2021, compared with the previous year. Available office space averaged 12.4% for 2021, up from 11.3% in 2020 and around 11% prior to the pandemic in 2019, according to Lisa Sturtevant, chief economist for Virginia Realtors, citing data from Washington, D.C. -based commercial real estate analytics company CoStar Group Inc.
It’s not an unexpected situation, she says.
“Businesses didn’t have the opportunity to vacate their office space until their leases were over, so they were locked in [during] 2020,” Sturtevant says. And as the pandemic persisted, she explains, companies were able to exit or renegotiate leases.
Statewide, office net absorption (total square feet leased per year minus square feet vacated) was negative for six consecutive quarters, starting in the third quarter of 2020 and lasting through 2021, according to a Virginia Realtors report.
The leasing picture also varies by region.
Northern Virginia, the state’s largest market, had about 36 million square feet of vacant office space at the end of 2021. That’s about 15.7% of the region’s total 229 million square feet of office space — around a percentage point higher than 2020. Prestigious Class A office space accounts for half of NoVa’s office space and had a vacancy rate of 19% last year, compared with about 17.5% in 2020. Aside from the pandemic, Sturtevant says, another factor continuing to impact Northern Virginia’s elevated vacancy rate is the military’s 2005 Base Realignment Closure (BRAC) plan, which resulted in some military agencies and associated contractors vacating leased office space in the region.
Richmond’s office market, on the other hand, bounced back faster than Northern Virginia’s during 2021, Sturtevant says.
Many downtown Richmond businesses have ties to state government, where working in person was more important, she says. As a result, vacant office space has increased less than a percent year-over-year to 6.7% but remained higher than the 2019 vacancy rate of 5.6%, according to Amy Broderick, Richmond-based senior vice president with Cushman & Wakefield | Thalhimer.
Leasing activity is rebounding in Richmond, says Komail Khaja, Colliers’ director of research for Central and Southeast Virginia. In 2020, about half the leases in Richmond were new and a third were renewals, but 2021 saw the inverse. A lot of space that has come on the market, including subleased space, has been backfilled, he notes.
Broderick says that significantly more companies vacated office space in Richmond during 2020 and 2021 compared with 2019, likely due to pandemic-related downsizing and remote work.
David Wilkins, Richmond-based executive vice president and principal with Colliers Mid-Atlantic, is optimistic that the Richmond market will begin to accelerate in the next 12 to 24 months. Most markets in Virginia are “quite healthy,” with smaller markets facing supply constraints with less than 5% vacancy, he says. “Consistent across the commonwealth,” he notes, “smaller local and regional firms are back in the office.”
Hampton Roads ended 2021 with an office space vacancy rate of about 8%, higher than its pre-pandemic rate in 2019 of 7.5%, but still below the 2021 national average of about 12%, according to Rob Sult, Harvey Lindsay Commercial Real Estate brokerage associate, citing CoStar Group data.
Sult’s optimistic that office space performance will improve across the Hampton Roads market, but cautions, “If we have another outbreak … [and] if we go backwards again, then all bets are off.”
Murky future
Landlords are bending over backward to lure tenants, offering everything from flat rental rates to several months of free rent to shorter leases and above-market tenant improvement allowances. “There’s a pretty big share of businesses that are looking for ways to change up their office space to make it more attractive,” Sturtevant says.
While some industries may move to completely remote work or downsize with hybrid work, companies requiring office space are seeking locations with significant amenities to draw employees back to the office.
“Who wants to leave their house if they have their kitchen and their gym and their bed and their couch and a TV?” asks Rachel Salasky, a Virginia Beach-based associate with Divaris Real Estate Inc. “Landlords are needing to find a way to make their office buildings something exciting to come to.”
For the commercial real estate industry, predicting when or if workers will return to offices in larger numbers can feel like a guessing game.
Two major Virginia employers have already made the shift to hybrid work. McLean-based Capital One Financial Corp. delayed its return to in-office work at least two times before giving up on a specific date at the end of 2021. Similarly, Richmond-based Dominion Energy Inc. adopted a hybrid and remote working policy for roughly one-third of its employees. Federal contractor Peraton Inc., which is building a new headquarters in Reston, with plans to open this summer, also is viewing its future as a hybrid work model, says Matt McQueen, senior vice president and chief communications and engagement officer.
“I think a lot of employers were planning to call employees back to the office in 2022, and then, of course, omicron [happened],”Sturtevant says. She notes that federal agencies were set to bring their workers back into the office, but many put those decisions on the back burner. She anticipates more movement back to the office in the second half of this year.
Given the Great Resignation and tighter labor market, “I think more and more, we’re realizing that it won’t be back in the office five days a week for most people,” she adds. “Increasingly businesses are looking for ways to offer more flexible hybrid [work] options.”
Falls Church-based Kastle Systems, a tech company providing monitored security systems and managed access control for office buildings, tracks data for 2,600 buildings and more than 41,000 businesses across 47 states. Each week, it releases occupancy data for 10 markets nationwide.
In mid-November 2021, weeks before the emergence of the omicron variant of COVID-19, the average occupancy rate across those 10 markets was 39%, peaking at 40.6% in December 2021, says Kastle Chairman Mark Ein. But by the end of January, it was about 30% nationally and about 26% for the Washington, D.C., metro region.
At this point, Ein says, health and safety are less of a concern than a fundamental shift in the way people want to work. “They’re asserting their power to not return to the office,” he says.
As case counts drop, Ein anticipates more workers returning to the office but says hybrid work models will likely be permanent.
“We have expected to see another meaningful increase in people going back to the office, and so I do think at some point you will see people coming back to the office in meaningfully higher levels than they are today,” he says. “But we don’t think it’s ever — or for a very long time —going to be at that pre-COVID level. We just don’t think that’s going to be the case.”
With so much up in the air, it can be a challenging time for companies that are deciding whether to make significant investments in office space. Many are holding off on signing long-term leases.
“My sense,” Sult says, “is that right now, to a large degree, the decision matrix is one of kicking the can down the road for short periods of time until that hybrid demand is more clear.”
The Marina Point Apartments complex in Chesapeake has sold for $14.15 million, brokerage firm Marcus & Millichap announced Feb. 23.
MRKT Realty LLC acquired the property from a joint venture headed by Phil Capron, according to Marcus & Millichap.
The 104-unit multifamily property located at 1301 Canal Drive includes 13 buildings with one-, two- and three-bedroom units. The complex was built in 1965 and sits on 7.84 acres.
Altay Uzun, Justin Ferguson, Theo Jolley and David Chae, with Marcus & Millichap’s Virginia offices, listed and marketed the property on behalf of the seller. The listing team also secured the buyer.
Two office buildings in the Greenbrier area of Chesapeake have been sold for $18.9 million, Cushman & Wakefield | Thalhimer announced Feb. 22.
Miami-based KAS Partners acquired Greenbrier Office Towers I and II from FP Greenbrier Towers LLC, according to Chesapeake property records.
The 171,762-square-foot Class A office portfolio is on 11.44 acres at 860-870 Greenbrier Circle. The two towers are 78% leased by more than 30 companies, including government and defense contractors, investment management companies, law firms and IT firms.
Eric Robison and Bo McKown of Thalhimer’s Capital Markets Group represented the seller in the transaction. Jason Hochman, Ron Granite and Brad Geiger of Cushman & Wakefield assisted the buyer with a $13.5 million fixed rate loan.
Broad Street Realty Inc. will acquire Midtown Row in Williamsburg for $122 million, the Bethesda, Maryland-based company announced on Feb. 22. It previously has served as the mixed-use development’s manager and leasing broker.
Broad Street is acquiring the 221 Monticello Ave. property from a joint venture whose controlling general partner includes Broad Street Principals, Lamont Street Partners and Bridger Corp., according to the company. The deal is expected to close in the second quarter.
The mixed-use property is near the campus of William & Mary and has 240 newly finished student apartments and 63,573 square feet of retail space. It’s the company’s fifth property in Virginia and 16th total in its portfolio and has been promoted as Williamsburg’s new city center.
“We are proud to further solidify our commitment to Midtown Row and the Williamsburg region with this acquisition,” Chairman and CEO Michael Z. Jacoby said in a statement. “We have served as the development manager for Midtown Row and serve as the property manager and the leasing broker for the retail portion as well so this is truly a natural evolution.”
Jacoby said the company developed this portion of Midtown Row on a fee basis for a related-party joint venture and currently manages and leases the retail portion of the buildings. Broad Street Realty has properties in the mid-Atlantic, Southeast and Denver, Colorado, markets.
The University of Virginia has established a new Center for Real Estate and the Built Environment at the McIntire School of Commerce with a $10 million alumni gift, the university announced Tuesday.
The center, which will serve as a hub to bring together U.Va.’s commercial real estate curriculum with university research, is being launched with the donation from 1987 alumnus Robert M. White Jr., founder and former CEO of New York-based commercial real estate data firm Real Capital Analytics Inc.
White has made previous significant donations to Mr. Jefferson’s University. In December 2019, he gave $3 million to establish U.Va.’s Bicentennial Professorship in Real Estate Finance, which established the position held by Drew Sanderford, the real estate center’s new director. White’s $3 million gift was matched by another $2 million from the university’s Bicentennial Professors Fund, which provided faculty support for initiatives in real estate finance.
“We are enormously grateful for Bob’s partnership in helping us coalesce the university’s widespread academic pursuits in real estate under one umbrella,” McIntire School Dean Nicole Thorne Jenkins said in a statement. “The center will function as a pan-university real estate hub through which we will bring students and faculty from a variety of disciplines together with alumni and industry to support our academic programs, expand and strengthen our U.Va. and industry networks and support the production and dissemination of faculty and industry research.”
In September 2021, the McIntire School of Commerce added a real estate minor, which was offered for the first time this spring.
A medical office building in Virginia Beach sold for $21 million, Nashville, Tennessee-based buyer Montecito Medical Real Estate announced Thursday.
Located at 1717 Will O’ Wisp Drive, the two-story Beach Medical Pavilion has 52,000 square feet. Its tenants are Gastroenterology Ltd. of Virginia Beach and OrthoVirginia. The property is across the street from Sentara Virginia Beach General Hospital.
“We are very pleased to acquire this prime property in an attractive and growing health care market,” Rus Gudnyy, senior vice president of investments for Montecito Medical, said in a statement. “We are also excited about the opportunity to enter into a long-term relationship with a dominant provider like Gastroenterology Ltd. and to build on our long-standing relationship with OrthoVirginia.”
Chris Devine and Chris Zarpas with S.L. Nusbaum Realty Co. brokered the sale. The developer was Virginia Beach-based Robinson Development, and the seller 1717 WOW LLC.
Gastroenterology Ltd. has nearly 20 physicians and three locations. The Beach Medical Pavilion one is its flagship location and includes an endoscopy center.
OrthoVirginia has 131 physicians and more than 400 practice members across 44 locations.
McLean-based Capital Automotive Real Estate Services Inc. has been acquired by Los Angeles-based investment management firm Ares Management Corp. for $3.8 billion, Ares announced Thursday.
Ares bought the company from a Brookfield private real estate fund, according to a news release from Ares. The purchase was made with funds managed by Ares’ alternative credit strategy and real estate group.
Capital Automotive, a self-managed real estate company that provides sale-leaseback capital to automotive dealers around the country and Canada, has more than 250 real estate assets structured as long-term triple net leases.
“Our net lease capabilities sit at the nexus of our leading credit and real estate teams, providing us with a 360-degree view through which we can offer highly flexible net lease solutions,” Joel Holsinger, partner and co-head of Ares’ alternative credit business, said in a statement. “We are excited by growing market demand from sponsors and companies seeking a creative partner to help them unlock the value of their real estate assets. We are committed to being a partner of choice to them.”
Ares said it has accelerated its net lease activities and Ares’ funds have invested in more than 1,200 assets totaling $7.2 billion in the U.S. and Europe over the past 15 months. The investments include retail, industrial and office assets.
“I’m excited to be partnering with the team at Ares and believe that together we will be well-positioned to take advantage of the expanding opportunity set in the net lease market,” said Jay Ferriero, president and CEO of Capital Automotive. “Beyond the competitive edge of the Ares platform and the experience of the team, the strength of this partnership is reinforced through our shared commitment to accelerating positive social impact.”
As of Dec. 31, 2021, Ares had $306 billion of assets under management with 2,100 employees across North America, Europe, Asia Pacific and the Middle East.
An affiliate of Washington, D.C.-based The UIP Companies Inc., in partnership with New Jersey-based furnished housing company Churchill Living, purchased The Millennium apartment building in Arlington for $200.5 million on Jan. 20, Arlington property records show.
Located at 1130 S. Fair St., near Metropolitan Park — the first phase of Amazon.com Inc.’s HQ2 — the 19-story The Millenium has 290,718 square feet, of which 7,110 is retail space, and 300 apartment units. UIP plans to renovate the units’ kitchens and bathrooms and add 5,000 more square feet of retail by converting the street-level common area.
After renovations, Churchill Living will be an exclusive provider, according to a news release, occupying up to 150 units for leases of 30 days or more.
The Indian River Shopping Center in Virginia Beach has been sold for $5.9 million, Cushman & Wakefield | Thalhimer announced Wednesday.
JFS Real Estate LLC purchased the 89,189-square-foot shopping center from Indian River Shopping Center Land LLC as an investment.
The shopping center, which includes a Food Lion and Burlington, is located at 880 S. Military Highway and is on about 12 acres of land.
Janet Whitbeck of Cushman & Wakefield | Thalhimer handled the sale negotiations on behalf of the buyer.
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