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NexCore Group Breaks Ground On Dallas-Area Medical Office Building

NexCore Group, on behalf of Hunt County Regional Hospital, has broken ground on the Hunt Regional Healthcare Medical Office Building, a 70,000-square-foot facility in Royse City, Texas.

The development team includes Hill & Wilkinson General Contractors and architecture firm Page Southerland Page. Delivery is expected in the fall of 2024.

In April, the City awarded a $925,000 cash incentive to NexCore Group for the development of the property. The project involves a $20 million capital investment.

Upon completion, the property will be home to an emergency facility, as well as to specialty practices including women’s care and orthopedics. Medical services provided will include diagnostic imaging, laboratory services and primary care.

The health-care facility is taking shape at the intersection of Interstate 30 and Shaw Road, some 30 miles from downtown Dallas. Other medical providers in the surrounding area include Royse City Dental Care, Royse City Emergency Hospital, Texas Health Family Care and Hunt Regional Family Medicine, among others.

NexCore Group currently has four other projects, located in Indiana, Colorado, Nevada and Arizona, in its development pipeline. The medical office buildings have a completion date set for the last quarters of 2023 and 2024.

Another medical office building broke ground near Dallas earlier this year. Caddis Healthcare Real Estate kicked off the construction of a 60,000-square-foot facility in Frisco, Texas.

 

Source: Commercial Property Executive

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$24M Medical Office Building To Be Part Of ‘The Mix’ In Frisco, Texas

A New York developer is slated to start work soon on a five-story medical office building in The Mix in Frisco.

The Dallas Business Journal reports that the $24.4 million medical office building, with 116,580 square feet of space, will be constructed at the corner of Lebanon Road and Parkwood Boulevard. A public filing indicates the project will also have a $14.4 million, 193,677-square-foot, seven-tier parking structure with 556 parking spaces included.

JVP Management of New York is listed as the owner and CallisonRTKL Inc. of Dallas is the listed design firm. The construction start date is June 1 and completion is scheduled for summer of 2024.

The site is across the tollway from some of Frisco’s biggest mixed-use developments, including The Star — home of the Dallas Cowboys — as well as Frisco Station and The Gate. The plan for The Mix calls for 3 million square feet of housing, 2 million square feet of office space, 375,000 square feet of retail and two hotels.

 

Source: ConnectCRE

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Specialized HealthCare Assets Lead To Specialized Buyers

The healthcare sector is by no means immune to changing economic conditions, but among commercial real estate investors, medical facilities continue to be among the most popular and desirable investments. An aging U.S. population has driven demand for all types of healthcare properties—from more traditional medical office buildings, physicians’ offices and urgent care facilities to highly specialized properties including behavioral health, post-acute care facilities and micro-hospitals. But as healthcare facilities become more specialized, we’ve seen buyers become more specialized as well.

Some healthcare and medical investors see value in acquiring assets with high acuity uses and expensive finishes and build-outs. High revenue potential and replacement costs for these properties provide investors with certainty of continued use by the tenant. Other investors have become focused on properties leased to health systems, and see an opportunity to foster relationships with their tenants for long-term success. Still other investor groups recognize that high construction costs have created opportunities to acquire value-add facilities, including second-generation medical office buildings that are ripe for renovation or redevelopment. Regardless of an investor’s chosen lane of specialization, ever- increasing demand from consumers will continue to drive the need for new healthcare facilities, creating more and more opportunities for investors to enter the sector or add to their existing portfolios.

Large Pipeline

Healthcare development is occurring throughout the U.S. as consumer demand can be found across all regions and in markets of all sizes. Unsurprisingly, the state of Florida currently leads the nation in new healthcare development. With more than 21 percent of the population over age 65, demand from retirees and aging Americans are keeping developers busy.

As these new developments come online, they’re capturing the attention of a variety of buyer groups. While REITs and institutional investors have historically been quite active in the sector, changing market dynamics have caused these buyers to become less competitive over time. The desire to acquire healthcare assets remains strong, but with more buyers now active in the sector, the available supply of properties is not enough to meet investor demand. Private equity funds, family trusts and individual investors have come to appreciate the stability and increasing demand forecasted for the sector, and REITs and institutions are simply being outbid by buyers with access to low-cost capital and a strong appetite for the product. As a result of this demand, we have seen the single-tenant healthcare sector grow in annual transaction volume, demonstrating a nearly 150 percent increase in the last 10 years.

Looking ahead, however, the gap between buyer and seller expectations will cause transaction volume to decline, and activity is expected to be suppressed for at least the next 12 months. The ability to sell at unprecedented pricing is likely a thing of the past and is no longer a primary motivation for owners. Instead, in the next 18 to 36 months, conditions motivating a sale should center around debt maturity and the need to refinance. In today’s environment, sellers will need to price their assets for today’s buyers or risk chasing the market, while buyers shouldn’t ignore good fundamentals. As buyers and sellers see-saw their way closer to alignment on pricing in the coming quarters, the market can expect to see activity resume, although the lack of supply could be problematic for some time given anticipated demand.

By Toby Scrivner, senior vice president at Northmarq.

 

Source:  Commercial Search