Office, Retail Owners Look To Fill Vacancy With Healthcare: It Often Doesn’t Work

Children’s National Hospital is one of several D.C.-area health systems looking to expand its footprint into more neighborhoods across the region, and it is taking advantage of record office vacancy to find new locations.

“Children’s National used this strategy to lease two floors at the Wonder Bread Factory office building, a Douglas Development-owned property in Shaw that became vacant after WeWork and other tenants moved out,” said Children’s Executive Vice President and Chief Strategy Officer Michelle McGuire at Bisnow’s Mid-Atlantic Healthcare Summit in D.C.

Douglas Development principal Norman Jemal confirmed to Bisnow that Children’s National leased the first two floors of the building, which total around 50K SF and were previously occupied by a nonprofit.

McGuire said the deal is part of Children’s National’s efforts to expand from its main D.C. campus into neighborhoods across the region to give more people convenient access to healthcare.

“The health system also leased 140K SF in the former Discovery Communications headquarters in Silver Spring, and it is opening facilities in Friendship Heights, Columbia Heights, Anacostia, Takoma Park and Prince George’s County,” McGuire said. “We’ve been thinking about needing to be in communities to address gaps in care and access to care and access to specialty care, so that drives the need to have a broader footprint.”

For some health systems, the coronavirus pandemic highlighted the importance of having locations in the community. Howard University College of Medicine Associate Dean for Strategy Outreach and Innovation Michael Crawford said he saw the most successful Covid testing and vaccination sites were ones within neighborhoods, rather than at large healthcare campuses.

“Folks are craving that intimacy between their providers and that’s helping inform how we look at an ambulatory strategy,” Crawford said. “Is that co-location? Yes, co-location is an attractive proposition when you think about how you can array services to meet the needs of the customer. Is that looking at commercial spaces? Yes, you have to take that into consideration.”

Johns Hopkins University & Health Systems Vice President of Economic Development Alicia Wilson said her organization is also looking at commercial spaces as a way to be closer to patients.

“We’re thinking about our growth and thinking about our utilization of leased spaces within commercial buildings, and how we have our patient care be closer to our patients and repurposing our facilities at traditional hospital centers for those things that must be done at the hospital site,” Wilson said.

The prospect of leasing to health systems is especially attractive to office and retail owners that experienced rising vacancy during the pandemic. Cushman & Wakefield Managing Director Matthew Sullivan said medical users have increasingly heard from these owners looking to lease space to them.

“A lot of asset classes, office and retail in particular, have had a tough go the last 18 months,” Sullivan said. “The ownership of those asset classes calls the healthcare crowd all the time and says, ‘Can we get medtail, put medical into retail?’ or, ‘Hey, I’ve a got commodity [Class-]B office, and 20% is a couple physicians, can we convert it?'”

While the landlords are expressing more interest, Sullivan said it is often difficult to convert office and retail space into medical use. He said the cost can be so high that the landlord would need to land a large user with a long-term commitment. He cited one example of this, MedStar Health’s 112K SF lease with Beacon Capital at D.C.’s Lafayette Centre in 2015, but he said those deals are few and far between.

“Overall, it’s unlikely those are successful without dramatic changes,” Sullivan said. “All the infrastructure things have to be created, and that becomes really expensive. On the surface it sounds easy: ‘Let’s get medical folks and stick them here, and there’s good parking in this shopping mall.’ But medical is not going to take down a 200K SF old Macy’s. There are a few cases across the country, but overall it’s more challenging.”

“Landlords that try to put medical users in the same building as traditional office tenants often find the two are difficult to mix,” Anchor Health Properties Vice President of Investments Elliott Sellers said. “We made the conversion bet selectively across the country, but you need to go into it assuming that your commercial tenants are likely going to leave,” Sellers said. “Those two uses don’t really coexist all that well when you have a law firm in one floor and you have sick patients sitting in the lobby. In all four of those cases, we’ve had almost all of our commercial tenants leave.”

Sellers said office landlords are better off bringing in medical real estate experts and trying to market the full building to healthcare users, but he said the conversion projects aren’t easy to execute.

“You layer in the complexities of design and mechanical systems and layout, and I think there’s probably more losers than winners when it comes to conversion, not just in D.C., but broadly,” Sellers said.

Douglas Development, which leased the first two floors of its Wonder Bread Factory building to Children’s National, is planning to fill the top two floors of the building with coworking office users.  The landlord is rolling out its new in-house coworking concept, The Mark, on the former WeWork floors of that building and two other D.C. buildings WeWork vacated in October, the Washington Business Journal reported. Jemal confirmed the plans to Bisnow and said he thinks Children’s National and the coworking space will fit well together in the building.

“We were able to secure Children’s Hospital, which is a great tenant, it fits in great for the neighborhood, and it serves the community,” Jemal said. “The days of everybody wearing a suit and tie in an office building are the days of yesteryear. Everybody needs to see a doctor at some point — that’s just the reality of life — and where better for it to be than in the community?”

Health systems are also looking to locate within mixed-use developments that have apartments, retail and other uses. Whitman-Walker just broke ground on its new healthcare facility on the St. Elizabeths East campus in Congress Heights. Whitman-Walker CEO Don Blanchon, speaking at the event, said his team has focused on how to integrate the facility with the rest of the development to make it a space that feels like part of the community.

“At St. Elizabeths, we’re going to do a bunch of workaround healthcare, there’s going to be a bunch of services there,” Blanchon said. “The real issue is: What’s going to bring the community in? How do we think about that space, what do we do for activation on the ground floor? What do we do for engagement? What do we do on the outside of the space? In dealing with our partner Redbrick, there’s been a lot more thought about this sense of community ownership and activation. Ten years ago, we just didn’t spend as much time on that.”

 

Source: Bisnow

Related Cos. Buying Stake In CareMax To Develop Senior Health Centers

Related Companies is acquiring up to a 9 percent stake in Miami-based health care provider CareMax, with plans to develop about 75 senior health centers in underserved areas nationwide.

Related bought $5 million of CareMax stock, at a price of $10 per share as part of the agreement, and will serve as an investor, advisor, developer, and even as landlord of CareMax health centers, The Wall Street Journal first reported. CareMax or its affiliates will operate the new facilities, according to a press release.

“Quality healthcare is essential for all communities to thrive,”Bryan Cho, executive vice president of Related Companies, said in a statement. “We chose CareMax to help expand their reach because their fully integrated model is uniquely positioned to address the systemic issue many low-income seniors face.”

Cho will join the CareMax board of directors as part of the deal.

The Hudson Yards developer also received warrants to purchase up to 8 million additional shares at $11.50 per share, which can be exercised based on when the new medical centers that Related helped create are opened, according to the release.

“CareMax serves 65,000 people with its 42 Florida medical centers — about 22,000 of which are seniors — and will use the investment to expand its centers into Texas, Tennessee, New York and other states,” Ben Quirk, chief strategy officer at CareMax, said in a statement to Commercial Observer.

Three initial facilities have plans to open in 2022: a 8,000-square-foot spot at 651 River Avenue in the Bronx Terminal Market; a 5,000-square-foot outpost at 17-31 Seagirt Boulevard in Ocean Park Apartments in Far Rockaway, Queens; and a 27,000-square-foot spot on 1915 3rd Avenue in East Harlem, Quirk said. The leases are long term, though Quirk would not comment further on the terms.

The Miami health care company, founded in 2011, plans to open a total of 75 new centers in the next three years. Its residents pay monthly subscriptions through Medicaid and Medicare for health care, rather than fees based on individual office, clinic and hospital visits, per WSJ.

Related Companies, which got its start as an affordable housing developer after its founding in 1972, pointed to a growing need to serve affordable housing residents, who tend to age where they are rather than move, according to WSJ. The landlord, which owns 60,000 affordable housing units in 24 states, views health centers as a source of demand for flagging downtown retail spaces.

“Together with Related we saw that there is a profound nationwide need for medical and social care within and convenient to affordable housing communities,” Carlos de Solo, president and CEO of CareMax, said in a statement. “We engaged Related as our real estate advisors to assist us in locating our de novo medical centers directly within and near to these affordable senior communities nationwide.”

 

Source: Commercial Observer

Suburban Medical Office Pricing Is At A Premium

As investors moved toward real estate sectors with better growth opportunities, they turned towards the medical office sector.

Now pricing is at a premium relative to suburban offices, according to an analysis by Real Capital Analytics.

From Q1 2016 to Q1 2021, medical office cap rates averaged 20 basis points (bps) lower than suburban offices. However, in Q1 2021, that spread increased 25 bps, as medical office properties had a 6.5% cap rate across the US.

Suburban office and medical office haven’t always diverged. For example, from 2002 to 2015, there was no discernable spread between cap rates for suburban offices and medical office buildings, according to RCA.

Not surprisingly, prices for medical offices have also held up better than suburban offices through the pandemic. While RCA CPPI for suburban offices declined at a 0.7% year-over-year pace into Q3 2020, it posted a 2.7% pace of growth into Q1 2021.

For medical offices, the volatility wasn’t as great. The RCA CPPI for medical offices hit a low of 2.5% annual growth into Q3 2020 but stood at a 2.8% pace by Q1 2021.

“The investors have been more optimistic about the medical office sector, understanding that an aging population requires more medical intervention,” according to RCA’s Jim Costello.

Medical office deal volume was also more robust through the pandemic. In Q1 2020, medical office deal volume fell only 41% year-over-year. By comparison, suburban offices suffered a 64% decline.

While suburban office may not fare as well against medical office, it has outperformed urban office. Its growth accelerated to a 3.6% annual pace in March, while urban assets declined by 2.4% year-over-year, reflecting a continuing trend of suburban outperformance in the sector, according to a separate analysis from Real Capital Analytics.

 

Source: GlobeSt