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Re: The Coming Garden State Office Boom - Companies in overcrowded Manhattan begin to look west agai
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1. The lease holder at WTC is Silverstein, not Silverman as I wrote in a previous post.

2. Where do I think most people will be working? From their homes - the need for face to face interaction is perceived to be too costly. My conservative work place already has people working at home as much as 2 days a week - made possible by investment in computer systems that allow access to files, same time conferences, etc. I am told (but have no proof) that already there are companies with expanded work at home programs that have cut back on their office space. Desk sharing has come into play.

Whether this makes for an enjoyable worklife is questionable - will people like the lack of comraderie that the watercooler conversation provides? I am not sanguine about the future of office buildings - any being built should probably have alternative plans for conversion to residential.

Posted on: 2006/4/15 19:06
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Re: The Coming Garden State Office Boom - Companies in overcrowded Manhattan begin to look west agai
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you guys are dead wrong. any buildings put up in the next 5 years will be online for the next 100 years. nyc is projected to increase in population by 1,000,000 people over the next 20+ years - where do you think these people will work? to get a major building through approvals and built in nyc can take 5-10 years. stop thinking that tomorrow - literally - is as far out as we need to think. business leaders were calling for 49 million modern sf prior to 9/11 and in a followup in 2004.

Posted on: 2006/4/15 15:04

Edited by medfever555 on 2006/4/15 15:25:03
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Re: The Coming Garden State Office Boom - Companies in overcrowded Manhattan begin to look west agai
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From Brewster: What a crock. Anyone following the Battle of Ground Zero knows that one of the issues they're duking it out over is the fact that no one but Silverman sees a need to replace the amount of office space destroyed.

If that is the case - and I suspect you're right - why:

1. is there so much concern that Silverman doesn't have the finances to build the whole project?
2. did LMDC and others go nutty when it was suggested that part of the site be used for housing?
3. has the space allocated to cultural institutions been so limited?

I think the general public is being snowed.

Posted on: 2006/4/15 13:07
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Re: The Coming Garden State Office Boom - Companies in overcrowded Manhattan begin to look west agai
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My point exactly -- what do you think I am stupid. haha

Quote:

brewster wrote:
Quote:

GrovePath wrote:
The source was http://www.njbiz.com !


And that gives them unbiased veracity? They're hardly uninterested in promoting investment in NJ.

Posted on: 2006/4/14 19:15
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Re: The Coming Garden State Office Boom - Companies in overcrowded Manhattan begin to look west again
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shortly before 9-11 a report was put out by a group of business leaders call the "group of 100" or something similar. at that time they projected the need for at least 25 million addtional square ft of office space to meet demand over the next 10 yrs.

Posted on: 2006/4/14 19:07
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Re: The Coming Garden State Office Boom - Companies in overcrowded Manhattan begin to look west agai
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Quote:

GrovePath wrote:
The source was http://www.njbiz.com !


And that gives them unbiased veracity? They're hardly uninterested in promoting investment in NJ.

Posted on: 2006/4/14 18:54
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Re: The Coming Garden State Office Boom - Companies in overcrowded Manhattan begin to look west agai
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The source was http://www.njbiz.com !

Posted on: 2006/4/14 18:50
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Re: The Coming Garden State Office Boom - Companies in overcrowded Manhattan begin to look west agai
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What a crock. Anyone following the Battle of Ground Zero knows that one of the issues they're duking it out over is the fact that no one but Silverman sees a need to replace the amount of office space destroyed.

Posted on: 2006/4/14 18:46
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The Coming Garden State Office Boom - Companies in overcrowded Manhattan begin to look west again
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The Coming Garden State Office Boom - Companies in overcrowded Manhattan begin to look west again

NJBIZ Staff, Shankar P.
4/17/2006

Space shortages and high rents are leading occupants of the famed skyline to consider relocating operations to New Jersey.

Jersey City - New Jersey landlords look for the next boom in the state?s office market to come from the spillover from fast filling-up Manhattan. The demand for new Manhattan office space could total 28 million sq. ft. over the next 10 years, according to a study by Moody?s Economy.com, but new construction will fall short by nearly 10 million sq. ft.

Manhattan will ?soon begin to feel a shortage of modern office buildings, and the supply of viable development sites will be inadequate,? adds a report from CB Richard Ellis, a real estate services firm. The resulting scarcity ?will cause a dramatic increase in the cost of doing business in New York, and a significant loss of business to competing markets.?

This could bring a third wave of demand from New York City to New Jersey, which added the back offices of financial services giants like Goldman Sachs and Merrill Lynch in the late 1990s and experienced a brief second wave of relocations after 9/11.

A new round of moves would be a boon to landlords in the Garden State, where the office vacancy rate averages 18%, according to figures compiled by Cushman & Wakefield. This compares with 8.4% in Manhattan and 6% to 7% in the Midtown area, which represents virtually full occupancy.

But New York City?s limited Class A office space and rents that average $43.20 a sq. ft.?vs. an average of $24.25 in New Jersey and $30 in Jersey City?are starting to turn away prospects and tenants with leases up for renewal.

?Today we are seeing [financial] companies migrating work forces out of not only Midtown but also Lower Manhattan so they can obtain a lower cost of occupancy and a reliable work force that can live in an affordable way,? says Mitchell Hersh, CEO of Cranford-based Mack-Cali Realty, the largest office landlord in Jersey City.

Among those moving to New Jersey has been Citco Funding Service, a hedge-fund administrator that in February signed a 15-year, 70,000-sq.-ft. lease valued at $23 million for offices in Mack-Cali?s Harborside Plaza 10 in Jersey City. Citco plans to relocate 300 workers from midtown Manhattan to the site this summer and add another 200 staffers.

The firm is following in the footsteps of Manhattan-based Moody?s Investors Service, which last June expanded its presence from 44,000 sq. ft. to 80,000 sq. ft. at Harborside Financial Center Plaza 5 in Jersey City, another Mack-Cali property.

Helping to spur such moves are the hordes of New Jersey residents who commute to New York City offices each day. Some 250,000 New Jerseyans cross the Hudson to their jobs, according to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York. That represents some 18% of the Manhattan work force.

?A lot of companies are doing [zip code] analyses of their employees? [residences] and finding that many come from New Jersey,? says David Stifelman, senior director at real estate services firm Cushman & Wakefield in East Rutherford.

Stifelman is handling inquiries from a half-dozen Manhattan companies looking for office space in Jersey City. He says three prospects have each made ?serious proposals? for leases on 30,000 sq. ft. They include a financial services firm that is looking for a headquarters office for more than 100 employees.

Further causing companies to look beyond Manhattan are projected increases in rent. Over the next 10 years, some 500 Midtown office tenants will face lease renewals, according to Cushman & Wakefield. In many cases, the firm says, landlords will seek to extract rent increases of 60%.

Jersey City?s status as an Urban Enterprise Zone (UEZ) gives it cost advantages over Manhattan in addition to cheaper rents. The UEZ designation enables tenants to save on sales taxes and electric power, among other benefits. Such incentives ?make Jersey City 30%-40% cheaper to operate from,? Stifelman says.

?Some of the larger transactions in the past six to 18 months could have gone to downtown Manhattan but came to Jersey City,? he adds. For example, ?Soci?t? G?n?rale and Mellon Financial Services came from Midtown and took up space in Newport Office Center 7.?

Hersh says Lower Manhattan suffers from ?a lot of instability and uncertainty? over what will be developed there. Delays in the construction of the Freedom Tower on the World Trade Center site have not helped.

?If you?re leading a company, the last thing you want to deal with is uncertainty, whether it be uncertainty in the markets or uncertainty in terms of being able to satisfy your space needs as you grow your company,? says Hersh. ?Coupled with that, whatever they choose to build there, it?s going to experience many years of difficult logistics due to the heavy construction work.?

Meanwhile, ?We are seeing companies factoring into their occupancy analysis the concept of decentralization off the island of Manhattan,? says Patrick Murphy, executive managing director for the New York Tri-State Region of CB Richard Ellis. As a result, ?some are moving operations to Hoboken and Jersey City.?

Posted on: 2006/4/14 17:57
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