Return Of In-Person Appointments Is Spurring Medical Office Demand In South Florida

As in-person medical appointments resume, the demand for medical office space for the aging population in South Florida has enhanced.

At the beginning of the pandemic, medical offices weathered the downturn better than traditional offices, but as new COVID-19 variants emerge and appointments continue, there is strong tenant demand.

According to the 2022 U.S. Medical Office National Report, the medical office vacancy rose 80 basis points to 9.5% in 2020, less than a third of the jump that was seen in traditional offices.

Late last year is when availability started to get tighter, benefiting rent growth. The report says the average asking rate national was $22 per square foot, which is up more than 4% since the end of 2019.

In Palm Beach, JLL Capital Markets recently closed the sale of a two-building medical office plaza in Boynton Beach. Although the price of the sale is unknown, the average rental price is $21.50 per square foot.

Woolbright Medical Plaza, located at 1700 and 1800 Woolbright Road, consists of two institutional-grade medical office buildings totaling 33,151 square feet.

JLL represented the seller, TopMed Realty, a private equity firm in Hallandale Beach, in the sale to AW Property Company, a real estate investment, and operating company in Palm Beach Gardens.

A surging population and large concentration of senior citizens in Palm Beach County are driving the demand for health care services. The medical center is adjacent to a 55+ community with 1,800 single-family homes and 500 apartments called Leisureville.

The building is also near Baptist Health Bethesda Hospital East, a 401-bed building and one of the largest health systems in South Florida. JLL Capital Markets closed the sale of the two-building Woolbright Medical Plaza in Boynton Beach.

TopMed rebranded Woolbright Medical Plaza from an office complex to a medical office plaza. It went from 63% to 93% leased. Tenants include physician groups providing radiology and imaging, ENT, primary care, dentistry and physical therapy services.

 

Source: DBR

Nation’s Top MOB Markets Include Texas And The Midwest, And They Just Keep Growing

Medical office buildings have proven to be a resilient asset class through the pandemic.

That’s because most tenants require these spaces to treat patients in person, providing a more stable tenant base for the asset class. And yet, these buildings are in short supply across the U.S.

Why? The buildings are more complicated to operate than a traditional office space—and more complicated to build—but investment in these facilities is growing, especially in Texas and the Midwest.

Using data provided by CRE research and listing platform CommercialEdge, 42Floors looked at the 25 biggest CRE markets across the U.S. and analyzed MOB construction activity between 2012 and 2021 to see how the asset class has gained interest for investment firms.

Overall, the top 25 medical office space markets in the U.S. grew 13% since 2012, adding more than 52.7 million square feet. Breaking it down, Los Angeles led the country for MOB square footage with more than 1,000 MOBs totaling more than 41 million square feet, which is far more than any other single market in the country, according to 42Floors.

That said, Houston ranked the second-largest MOB market in the U.S., which added 4.3 million square feet of medical office space over the decade, growing 15% to its current total of just over 33 million square feet. Dallas-Fort Worth, too, saw similar growth, based on the report, landing next on the list, adding 4.6 million square feet to its current 33-million-square-foot medical office footprint—16% growth since 2012.

Lower-tier markets with aging populations also saw some of the most growth during the decade, based on the report, like the Twin Cities. Minneapolis-St. Paul ranked No. 15 in the U.S. with 231 buildings totaling nearly 16 million square feet but has grown 24% in the last 10 years, adding three million square feet. That’s almost as much as was added in Los Angeles during the same period, which can be attributed to the city’s always-expanding 65-and-older demographic.

Finally, 42Floors found that Chicago’s market consisted of 28.8 million square feet across 427 buildings—the fourth largest MOB market. Chicago added more than 4.3 million square feet of medical office space and experienced 18% growth since 2012.

As for current developments in the Midwest, Chicago, Madison, Wis.; and Milwaukee will see three large projects delivered within the next two years:

• Chicago’s Joan & Paul Rubschlager Building at Rush (480,000 square feet) will be completed in Q3 of 2022;

• The Eastpark Medical Center in Madison (469,000 square feet) will be completed in Q1 of 2024;

• ThriveOn King in Milwaukee (455,000 square feet) will be completed in Q4 of 2023.

These three buildings will add more than 1.4 million square feet of medical office space to the region, based on the report.

 

Source: RE Journals

Heitman Acquires A Six Baylor Micro-Hospital Medical Office Portfolio In Dallas-Forth Worth

Heitman LLC, a global real estate investment management firm, today announced the acquisition of a six building portfolio of Baylor-anchored micro-hospital locations totaling approximately 190,000 square feet.

Heitman acquired the Baylor Scott & White Health System Medical Office Building portfolio on behalf of its global strategy in a joint venture with Seavest Healthcare Properties.

The properties were built between 2014-2018 and are affiliated with the largest hospital system in the Dallas-Fort Worth metroplex, Baylor, and are operated by Emerus Holdings who specializes in micro-hospital partnerships with large, sophisticated health systems.

The portfolio is 100% leased and the six properties are strategically located throughout the Dallas-Fort Worth area near population centers with access to major transportation nodes serving the larger metroplex.

“We are pleased to partner with Seavest, an established and high-quality MOB operator, to acquire this best-in-class micro-hospital portfolio on behalf of our global investment strategy and to work with Texas’ largest healthcare provider,” said Gordon Black, Heitman Senior Managing Director and Global Portfolio Manager. “Our global strategy invests across property types in the North American, European, and Asia-Pacific regions. The addition of the Baylor micro-hospital MOB portfolio provides our global portfolio strong risk diversification from both a regional and sector perspective as we continue to balance our portfolios to match today’s operating environment and continued uncertainty in the markets.”

BlackBirch Capital exclusively represented the seller.

 

Source: HREI