An ABC Heart of America webinar recap
This week Associated Builders & Contractors (ABC) Heart of America held an online developers panel moderated by Eric Mann with Emery Sapp & Sons.
Panelists included Andy Ashwal, VP, senior asset manager of GFI Management, Mike Bell, senior vice president of Hunt Midwest and Oscar Healy, regional vice president of Opus Design Build.
The discussion focused on the challenges as well as the opportunities surrounding future development resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic.
One of the trends the panelists are seeing skyrocket is e-commerce and the need for additional storage space as the U.S. supply chain has relied on ‘just in time’ delivery for many consumer products that are imported and shipped overseas.
“You’re going to see a change from ‘just in time’ deliveries to having a 5% safety stock being held in distribution facilities. Based upon different national brokers, you’ll hear numbers ranging from 500 million to 750 million SF of additional industrial space needed just to supply distribution centers that 5% safety stock,” said Bell.
“It will bring manufacturing back to the US. I think ‘Made in America’ will mean something more than it has in the past, said Healy.
The panelists also predict a surge of data centers to help fuel e-commerce.
“Kansas City is seeing the first wave of data centers. We’ve always been seen as a lower-level tertiary market, said Bell.
Panelists agreed other side-markets to the e-commerce industry include an increase in the need for robotics and higher, stacked building spaces.
The importance of the ‘live, work, play, stay’ concept of living is not going away anytime soon. Having amenities for offices and apartments will become of even greater value to millennials who might be staying in lofts and apartments longer than they expected.
“I think the trend of millennials staying in multifamily or maybe moving up to larger multifamily spaces is going to continue (as) they’re going to start to have children. They’re going to need services for their children there and play spaces. That has not existed in the Kansas City market, said Ashwal.
The need for additional on-site package delivery storage was also discussed.
“The ripple-effect of what’s going to happen on the office and multifamily side is there will be a need for larger package rooms to accept trackable deliveries. Refrigerated storage in office buildings will be a new trend to accommodate employees that want packages delivered to their office to bring home,” said Ashwal.
Some of the obstacles the panelists are seeing now and going forward are cost of construction and shortage of labor.
“Material increases and labor shortages have caused issues on our side from a development perspective, said Bell.
The panelists agreed that municipalities that are “developer-friendly” will be more attractive to developers going forward more than ever before.
“If you don’t have a tax incentive or tax abatement in some of our various cities or counties, you’re at a competitive disadvantage,” said Healy.
The discussion ended with hope that the pandemic is creating opportunities, especially for industrial development because of Kansas City’s well-built infrastructure and land availability. Also, KC offers 90% of the U.S. within a two-day shipping window.
Associated Builders & Contractors Heart of America is a commercial construction trade association serving contractors and construction related firms across Missouri and Kansas. ABC connects contractors to industry information and safety resources; serve as advocates at the state, local, and federal level; and provide a variety of educational opportunities for those in the industry including our federally registered apprenticeship program in multiple trades.
Sponsors of the event included: Nabholz Construction, Emery Sapp & Sons, Fogel-Anderson Construction, IMA Financial Group, HTH Corporation and Autodesk.