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1492 New World Latin Cuisine is set to open a second location at Casady Square Shopping Center before the end of the year. Casady Square is located at Penn and Britton in North Oklahoma City. The 6,437 square foot restaurant will feature a banquet room that can accommodate large groups and private parties. Brothers, Arturo and Marco Chavez, opened their first location in Midtown in September 2007. After quickly becoming a favorite dining spot for OKC locals they opted for a second location. Laci Jackson with Price Edwards represented the Landlord.

 

Blueknight Energy Partners leased 19,373 square feet of office space in the newly remodeled Packard Building at the corner 10th & Robinson in the Midtown District of Oklahoma City. The Packard Building blends office, restaurant, and retail spaces into a historic and architecturally unique building. With this pre-lease, the building starts 53% occupied with a large portion of the remainder of the building in current lease negotiations. The Blueknight space features an open, light filled concept designed by HSE Architects and will be built by Lingo Construction. Craig Tucker, Sr. Vice President, represented the Tenant and Derek James, Broker Associate, both of Price Edwards & Company represented the Landlord.

Blueknight Energy Partners provides gathering, transporting, terminalling, and storage of crude oil in Oklahoma, Kansas, and Texas. The company operates two pipeline systems delivering crude oil to refineries, and provides oil tank storage services. It also provides asphalt services.

 

3 Corporate Plaza 89% leased

September 2nd, 2011 | Posted by Marcie Price in Office - (0 Comments)

The Department of Consumer Credit leased 5,120 square feet in 3 Corporate Plaza, bringing the building to about 89% leased. The Tenant relocated after nearly 30 years in its previous location. The Landlord did an extensive remodel on the office to accommodate its specific needs.

 

Gold’s Gym has leased 15,080 square feet in Towne South Shopping Center at I-240 and Walker from North Pointe I, and will begin remodel in early September for its new concept, Gold’s Gym Express, which will open by the end of 2011. The new Express concept is intended to give clients experience at a local gym and provide packages that makes access available to all the full services provided by the larger Gold’s Gym locations on Northwest Expressway and on Memorial Road. Other tenants currently at Towne South are Jimmy’s Egg, Chuck E. Cheese, On the Border, Hair Rage, Coaches, Primos and City Bites. The lease was handled by Karleen Krywucki.

Gold’s Gym has signed a lease in east Norman to open its new concept Gold’s Gym Express in Alameda Square at 12th Street and Alameda. The Express location will occupy 16,696 square feet and offer free weights, cardio and resistance training machines and will open this fall. The Express locations are intended to supplement the larger format Gold’s Gym locations on Northwest Expressway and on Memorial Road in Oklahoma City. Karleen Krywucki of Price Edwards, represented the tenant.

 

Northwest Mutual Financial Network leased 7,200 square feet of office space at the corner of Shartel and Classen Drive. This three story 1930’s vintage property has been totally remodeled. The building sits on a very visible corner, which is a gateway to one of the hottest redevelopment areas in the Metro, the Midtown District. Northwest Mutual will use this as a division headquarters and training center. Derek James of Price Edwards & Company handled this lease, and has handled multiple leases in the Midtown District.

 

PetSmart has extended its lease on 23,569 sq ft at Mayfair Place in north OKC at 63rd and May Avenue for another 10 years. The owner of Mayfair Place, Mila Properties, has recently refurbished the shopping center and add Chick-Fil-A to the tenant mix. Karleen Krywucki represented the owner.

 

Schlotzsky’s renewed its lease at Midland Center, located at NW Expressway and Independence Ave in Oklahoma City. Plans are set for the 5,300 square foot building to go under a total remodel. Along with the renovations another Focus Brands Inc. concept, Cinnabon, will be added. Laci Jackson handled the transaction.

 

Spirit Halloween Superstores is the largest seasonal Halloween retailer. In 1999, Spirit operated 63 seasonal locations throughout the United States and was acquired by Spencer Gifts, LLC. Since the acquisition, Spirit has grown from 63 locations to over 850 throughout the United States, Canada and online for the 2010 season. Spirit carries an expansive and complete assortment of innovative, entertaining and fun Halloween costumes, decorations and accessories. Opening is planned for mid September and will run though the first week of November. It leased 14,689 square feet in The Village at Woodland Hills located just north of 71st on Memorial, across from Woodland Hills Mall. Susan Brinkley handled the transaction.

 

The Oklahoma City office market is performing very well given the sluggish national economy. The market absorbed another 85,000 square feet during the first six months of the year and appears poised to have a strong second half as well. Of course, it will need to as it faces the staggered relocation of Devon’s offices into its new 50-story tower during 2012.

The overall market vacancy fell from 17% to 16.4%, with all of that gain coming in the suburbs. The Central Business District’s vacancy rate actually increased from 24.9% to 25.3% while the suburban submarkets saw improvement from 12.8% down to 11.7%. As in our last few reports, the majority of the suburban gains were seen in the Northwest submarket where 58,000 square feet was absorbed and the vacancy fell from 11.6% to 10.6%. The Midtown area also saw significant improvement, absorbing 46,000 square feet and reducing its vacancy rate from 13.2% to 9.5%, solely on the strength of one 50,000 square foot lease with MidFirst at Shepherd Mall Office Complex.

The suburban Class A buildings, which are typically a market indicator of what’s to come, also showed significant gains. Class A suburban vacancy fell from 12.7% to 11.2% during the first half of the year and rental rates increased from $20.77 to $21.05. We expect rents to continue to rise in this sector for quite some time as the market gathers strength and no new speculative construction has been announced which would add to the supply.

The large MidFirst deal is just a small indication of just how dynamic the market is today as several relocations should result in large swings in the market and from one submarket to another. Obviously, the largest of these is Devon Energy which will eventually vacate a little over 800,000 square feet in downtown buildings over the next year to 18 months. However, two recent announcements help temper that loss as Continental Resources has purchased Devon’s existing headquarters building and will eventually backfill approximately 230,000 square feet at that location as it relocates employees from its current headquarters location in Enid, Oklahoma. Enogex also recently announced that it will relocate to the CBD, moving from approximately 116,000 square feet at Central Park in the North submarket to a like amount of space in the north tower of Leadership Square in the first quarter of 2012. Given the quality of the Central Park property and the dearth of large contiguous blocks of space in the suburbs, we do not expect it to take long to fill the void left by Enogex. Another significant transaction to occur in the first half of the year was Chesapeake Energy’s purchase of the 156,000 square feet Atrium Towers project. The tenants in the twin 6-story towers will eventually relocate to other properties as Chesapeake plans to use the buildings for its own employees. Given the buildings’ current occupancy, approximately 140,000 square feet of positive absorption should occur as those existing tenants find new locations. One move that will negatively impact the suburban markets in the second half of the year will be Paycom’s relocation from its current location in Lakepointe Towers where it occupies approximately 40,000 square feet to its new 90,000 square foot building on the Kilpatrick Turnpike.

It’s important to note that while the local office market has hovered near 15 million square feet for the past ten years, the city has actually seen significant growth in office space as many multi-tenant buildings have been purchased by owner occupants and removed from our report which tracks only “leased” buildings. Also, many users such as the aforementioned Paycom have built their own buildings and left available inventory behind.

 

Press coverage:
http://newsok.com/oklahoma-city-leased-office-market-tightens/article/3592167?custom_click=lead_story_title

The Price Edwards & Company 2011 Mid-Year Oklahoma City Office Market Summary can be downloaded here: PDF

In the midst of a sluggish nation recovery, the Oklahoma City industrial multi-tenant market continues a slow steady rebound. The last twelve months have seen increasing leasing activity, some stabilization of lease rates, and some significant portfolio sales. Overall the multi-tenant market reports a vacancy rate of 16.4%, down from 19.8% mid-year 2010. This is still significantly higher than the total Oklahoma City industrial market vacancy rate of 9.6%. Once again the multi-tenant market, which contains a high number of national industrial tenants, is more reflective of the national economy than local trends.

There was an important sale of a multi-tenant service warehouse facility to a user, 1101 S.E. 59th St., which removed 440,000 square feet of total space and 300,000 square feet of vacancy from the calculations. Factoring this space into the current vacancy still results in net positive absorption form midyear 2010, most of which occurred in the bulk warehouse market.

The Flex space market increased in vacancy from 10.2% in 2010 to 12.9% in 2011. The majority of this increase occurred in the Southeast submarket which went from 7.9% last year to 19% in 2011. A significant amount of flex space vacancy over last year can be attributed to the departure of out-of-town roofing companies which converged on Oklahoma City following the May 2010 hail storm.

The bulk warehouse market, with the highest concentration of national tenants, absorbed a net positive 113,000 square feet of space to post a current vacancy of 20.4%, down from 23.3% last year. These gains were more or less distributed evenly across the market. This positive absorption is perhaps the best news for the multi-tenant market as it reflects recovery, albeit slow, among  national and regional industrial companies.

Service Warehouse space enjoyed market-wide absorption, even factoring out the before mentioned sale. Service Warehouse is the smallest and most volatile of the multi-tenant property types. The very few modern service warehouse facilities maintain high and consistent occupancy, while the older, more functionally obsolete buildings are more subject to market swings and short-term leases.

The Price Edwards & Company 2011 Mid-Year OKC Industrial Market Summary can downloaded here: PDF