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Healthcare Is Entering A New Era Of Medical Office Development

Meridian CEO John Pollock uses three words to describe the biggest trend in healthcare real estate at the moment: outpatient, outpatient, outpatient.

“As healthcare enters a new era, companies providing more outpatient services are on an upswing,” Pollock said. “We are in an era of tremendous growth in outpatient services,” Pollock wrote in an email to Bisnow. “In fact, we are so sure that outpatient services is where the industry is headed that this sector is nearly our singular focus at Meridian. I believe that as healthcare systems provide more care in a lower acuity setting, they will be able to provide a better experience for patients and at a lower price.”

Healthcare is undergoing a tremendous transformation. Healthcare is adjusting, evolving and growing rapidly as baby boomers continue to retire, millennials and Generation Z mature, and technology continues to shape the healthcare space.

“Now more than ever, bigger players and more money — especially from institutional investors — are entering the industry, CBRE First Vice President Angie Weber said. “These large providers have really taken over and the independent physician has become a thing of the past,”

Weber and Pollock are speaking at Bisnow’s National Healthcare West event June 20. Because of the growing population and the fact that most everyone at one time or another gets sick, healthcare is seen as a safe and resilient investment.

“It’s very safe and strong,” Weber said. “But it’s very expensive. The cost of managing staff and patients, tenant improvements and construction are very high.”

Outpatient demand is driving the development of medical office buildings greater than 150K SF, according to a JLL report released in May.

“No area of growth in healthcare is higher than outpatient services,” Pollock said.

There are currently 44 medical office developments larger than 150K SF under construction in the U.S., according to the report. The projects, estimated at $5.3B worth of investment, total nearly 11M SF and represent 22% of all medical office projects underway, the report states. Of the 44 projects, five are 450K SF or more, one is in the 350K SF to 449K SF range, eight are 250K SF to 349K SF, nine are 200K SF to 349K SF and 21 developments are 150K SF to 199K SF.

“This new trend is a function of the well-recognized growth in outpatient care with its focus on the patient experience and physician convenience with critical services and specialties housed under one roof, with the added goal of accountable care in a lower cost setting,” the report states. “The timing couldn’t be better given the surge in capital seeking investment opportunities in healthcare given the quality of tenancy and durability of medical office properties.”

Weber said the outpatient trend is being driven by a combination of demands from patients and medical providers. Many people, especially millennials, don’t like visiting a hospital for treatment.   Medical providers also find that it costs more to do certain medical procedures in a hospital than an outpatient setting.

“Along with preventive care options, medical providers are opening more specialized healthcare facilities, such as those that offer treatment for depression or post traumatic stress disorder and behavioral and mental health facilities,” Weber said.  “We’re going to see more of that,” she said. “I think you’re going to see these outpatient clinics in all shapes and sizes.”

 

Source: Bisnow

Medical Office Buildings Are Going Godzilla. We’re Talking Big. Really Big.

The movie Godzilla: King of the Monsters opened May 31, with some film reviewers saying that the CG-generated “Beast from the East” seems to be getting bigger with every sequel.

The same might be said of medical office buildings (MOBs), according to a recent report from the Healthcare Capital Markets group with Chicago-based Jones Lang LaSalle.

Many healthcare real estate (HRE) professionals have recently expressed a gnawing sense that more, larger MOBs are being developed. Now, using data provided by HRE research firm Revista, JLL has verified that notion. Many MOBs are indeed becoming more Godzilla-like in size – especially those providing a wide array of services once offered only in inpatient settings.

In fact, JLL’s May 2019 Healthcare Capital Markets Perspective indicates that there are currently 44 future MOBs under construction nationwide that will be larger than 150,000 square feet.

King of the Monsters: The $375 million, 750,000 square foot David H. Koch Center for Cancer Care in New York. The outpatient facility for Memorial Sloan Kettering is slated for completion in 2019. (Rendering courtesy of Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center.)

These mega MOB projects have an aggregate total of 10.9 million square feet and represent 22 percent of all of the medical office projects currently underway in the country, according to JLL. These blockbuster buildings also represent $5.3 billion of investment at an average of $480 per square foot (PSF).

With more and more healthcare services being shifted from hospitals to outpatient facilities, it would only make sense that the average size of many new, technologically advanced MOBs is becoming more monstrous. After all, with many health systems now providing a wide array of services in the MOBs they occupy — including highly sophisticated and technologically advanced surgeries and treatments, including cancer and cardiac care — many of these outpatient facilities have been dubbed “hospitals without beds.”

The new Godzilla movie has received mixed reviews, but MOBs continue to receive five-star ratings from investors. JLL notes that most of the supersized MOB projects on the list — 34 of them — are being self-developed by health systems. But, just as Godzilla prevails in the end, the same might be true for patient MOB investors if some of the projects eventually make it to the investment markets.

“Most of the health systems that are self-developing at this time are some of the best-endowed, highest rated systems with good access to capital and prolific donor bases,” JLL notes. “Certainly, as credit cycles and capital markets change, these outpatient facilities would be ideal targets for monetization and would be desirable investments for the most qualified institutional investors.”

 

Source: HREI