Brent Miles

Industrial market flying smoothly through 2020 turbulence

Despite the economic turbulence COVID-19 has unleashed on 2020, the industrial real estate market seems to have buckled in for a relatively smooth ride, according to a recent CCIM KC panel.

Brent Miles, chief marketing officer and founding partner of NorthPoint Development and Joe Orscheim, SIOR, CCIM, senior vice president of CBRE, joined moderator Ben Boyd, CCIM Kansas City director of programs and vice president of Colliers International, for a webinar discussion last Friday about the state of the industrial market.

Both Miles and Orschein agreed that e-commerce is the major driver strengthening the industrial market as online shopping has exploded during the pandemic. Miles noted that increased demand for industrial space for companies like Amazon and Chewy is COVID-related, but he thinks the expansion represents a permanent change. 

“They are the infrastructure and the plumbing of how we’re getting goods,” Miles said.

According to Miles, NorthPoint Development, which owns approximately 75 million square feet of industrial properties across the United States, saw only about 5 percent of its clients request and receive rent relief.  

Orschein said he anticipated more requests from tenants for rent abatement than actually were made. Landlords, he said, used the requests as an opportunity to obtain updated financials, and in some instances, to extend the lease term by the number of months they abated rent. 

“It was good for both parties. It’s always good for a landlord to show that they’re looking out for their customer and obviously they want them to be financially strong so the project remains successful,” Orschein said.

Miles said that availability of labor remains a concern in the industrial market, with uncertainty about how future stimulus or bailout legislation will affect unemployment and labor. 

Orschein noted that there is a challenge to find “really good tracts that are ready to go” in the Kansas City area in order to satisfy demand. “We’re getting weekly calls from out of town developers and capital sources that are looking to land here in Kansas City, and we just need more land. We’ve got to figure it out. There’s strong demand, and we’re not seeing any kind of a slowdown so we’re encouraging everyone to just keep putting them up and we’ll all fill them,” said Orschein. 

Orschein also noted that rental rates in the Kansas City industrial market are “pretty steady and level” and that he is seeing lower cap rates. He anticipates that the local industrial market will see one or two big institutional players enter by the end of the year. 

“Everybody is taking note of Kansas City,” Orschein said.   

According to Orschein, there is strong demand for industrial space for the food industry; however, the challenge is to figure out food requirements and freezer cooler needs. 

“It’s obviously very expensive and highly specialized, but the need is there. We’ve just got to figure it out in Kansas City. In the industrial world, it seems like after the first couple of weeks of COVID hitting, it’s like everybody just got on the same page and said let’s all get back to work and keep the train moving,” Orschein said.

Eyeing potential along I-49, NorthPoint breaks ground on 148-acre golf course redevelopment

NorthPoint Development officially broke ground Wednesday morning on Southview Commerce Center, a 148-acre flex industrial campus at 16001 S. Outer Road just east of Interstate 49. At full buildout, the redevelopment of the former Southview Golf Course will create an estimated 1,400 jobs with an annual wage impact of $57 million.

“NorthPoint continues to expand its footprint in the Kansas City industrial market and we are pleased to announce our newest business park, Southview Commerce Center. This project shows our focus on investing in parks with great access, labor, and a strong public/private partnership like we have with the City of Belton,” said NorthPoint Development CEO Nathaniel Hagedorn, in a release.

Belton Mayor Jeff Davis noted NorthPoint Development’s success in helping transform communities through the development of quality business parks and thanked the development team for bringing its vision for the abandoned private golf course to the City.

“After sitting vacant for more than a decade, we believe that the redevelopment of the former Southview Golf Course will create new economic opportunity for the next generation of Belton residents,” Mayor Davis said. “The City is eager to continue working with NorthPoint to attract advanced manufacturing, warehouse and distribution operations to our community.”

Southview Commerce Center is master-planned for five state-of-the-art buildings ranging from 235,000 to 622,000 square feet, for a total footprint of more than 2 million square feet. The project’s construction timeline will be market driven based on leasing activity.

NorthPoint plans to invest more than $100 million in the redevelopment project.

“We always say, 'capital goes where capital is welcomed,’ and we feel very welcomed in Belton,” Hagedorn said. “Southview Commerce Center represents a large capital investment from our firm, which in turn will create significant job opportunities for the residents of Belton, Cass County, and the surrounding area.”

At the groundbreaking, NorthPoint Vice President Brent Miles credited the persistence of Belton Economic Development Director Carolyn Yatsook for NorthPoint’s initial interest in the site.

“We believe in Belton, and we believe in this site,” Miles said. “I wouldn’t be standing here today if I hadn’t decided to go to Big Cedar Lodge for Thanksgiving and ended up sitting on I-49 and seeing the site and saying, ‘Well, Carolyn continues to call me every three months, I think I’ll call her back.’ ”

Yatsook said the City has worked hard to create a business-friendly environment that allows developers like NorthPoint and business prospects to have an expedited, hassle-free experience as they move through the approval process.

“We offer a single departmental contact to help guide our development partners every step of the way-from initial consultation through to project delivery,” Yatsook said. “We also recognize that many projects are time sensitive. NorthPoint was able to move from land acquisition to today’s groundbreaking in under six months, which means they will be able to take advantage of this historically strong industrial market.”

Mark Fountain of True North Industrial Realty will lead leasing efforts for Southview Commerce Center.