Architects

Retail Giants: Grocery-anchored centers, trophy malls among hot retail developments [2014 Giants 300 Report]

Aug. 4, 2014
13 min read

Pop quiz time: Of the total retail sales in 2013, what percentage came from online shopping? 

Twenty-five percent? Nope, lower. Twenty percent? Not even close. Ten percent? Getting warmer.

Would you believe that, even with the e-commerce sector’s torrid pace of growth during the past decade, online sales represented just 6% of all retail business last year?

The gloom-and-doom scenario for bricks-and-mortar retail that is portrayed in the media is grossly overstated. It makes for good headlines, but it’s not based in fact, according to Jones Lang LaSalle’s latest retail sector outlook.

“Remember catalogs? Flipping through the pages, dialing up a call center, and placing an order? Web sales are really just replacing that,” said Kris Cooper, Managing Director, JLL Capital Markets. “People still need to see and touch things. The instant gratification of an in-store purchase can’t be discounted. Retailers who want to thrive will need to incorporate it all—hands-on goods, e-commerce, and mobile commerce.”

Giants 300 coverage of Retail brought to you by: C.R. Laurence www.crlaurence.com.

That’s not to say the retail sector doesn’t have its issues. There has been a spate of big-name store closings recently—including Coldwater Creek, Office Depot, and Radio Shack—and retailers continue to struggle to adjust to the structural changes occurring in their industry. 

But, all in all, the U.S. retail sector is faring quite well, according to JLL, continuing its solid recovery and exhibiting tightening market conditions. The real estate group expects asking rents nationally to rise 2.7% this year, following 1.1% growth in 2013, and vacancy rates to drop more than 6% for the second straight year.

Net absorption was up a whopping 42% in 2013, to 83.2 million sf. With increased demand for retail space, landlords are starting to exert some power in tenant selection and lease terms, according to JLL.

Here are some highlights from the firm’s Spring 2014 Cross Sector Outlook (http://tinyurl.com/JLLCrossSectorOutlook):
• Power centers are experiencing the tightest overall market conditions, with a total vacancy rate of just 5.1%.
• Investment dollars are flowing into high-quality, grocery-anchored centers and trophy malls. “Demand for those asset types is incredible right now—if only we could convince all the owners to bring those to market,” said Margaret Caldwell, Managing Director, JLL Capital Markets.  
• Construction growth will remain marginal during the next 12 months. New construction is focused primarily on single-tenant big-box and discount/wholesale space. Of the multi-tenant projects under construction, the majority are in urban cores and peripheral outlet centers.
• As the market continues to recover, the retail construction sector will eventually see an uptick in construction where tenants demand new space because supply is so constrained, where rents are high enough to justify construction, and where there are few barriers to new development, such as Orlando, Fla.
• Retail property transactions were strong in 2013. Sales of significant retail properties totaled more than $60.8 billion in 2013, up 8% from the previous year. Sales of strip centers and single-tenant properties fared even better, rising 26% year over year.
• There are strong opportunities for development in Sunbelt markets with higher-than-average population growth rates, including Charlotte, N.C., Orlando, and Raleigh, N.C.

 

SIGNS OF LIFE FOR SHOPPING CENTERS

For the first time since 2007, shopping center development in the U.S. increased year over year, according to Cushman & Wakefield’s new Global Shopping Center Development Report (http://tinyurl.com/CWreport). Nearly 400 shopping centers totaling more than 12.2 million sm of gross leasable area (GLA) were completed in 2013, an increase of 12.7% compared to the previous year. 

In fact, the U.S. has accounted for roughly 18% of all new shopping center space delivered worldwide since 2008, according to the report. And there’s no slowdown in sight.

During the next three years, an additional 758 centers containing approximately 11.2 million sm of new GLA will be added to the U.S. inventory, two-thirds of which is expected to be completed in 2014 alone. Developments in California, Florida, and Texas will make up about a third of all new shopping center construction during this period, according to Cushman & Wakefield.

While the large malls get all the headlines—like the long-delayed, 274,000-sm American Dream Meadowlands development in East Rutherford, N.J.,  and the 149,000-sm Shops at Summerlin (Nev.) Centre—the vast majority of new construction projects are small shopping centers, between 5,000 sm and 20,000 sm, with the average project at 17,700 sm. 

 

Top Retail Architecture Firms

Rank Company 2013 Retail Revenue 1 Callison $109,251,013 2 Gensler 105,979,349 3 RTKL Associates 66,018,000 4 MulvannyG2 Architecture 60,000,000 5 Stantec 57,434,454 6 WD Partners 44,000,000 7 RSP Architects 36,346,000 8 Little 27,786,704 9 MBH Architects 25,106,000 10 FRCH Design Worldwide 24,600,000 11 P+R Architects 19,191,791 12 Architects Orange 14,036,393 13 CTA Architects Engineers 14,020,991 14 DLR Group 13,900,000 15 NORR 12,997,934 16 CASCO Diversified Corp. 12,500,000 17 Bergmann Associates 12,416,000 18 Nadel 9,000,000 19 Perkins Eastman 7,750,000 20 Ware Malcomb 7,600,000 21 HOK 7,345,023 22 Good Fulton & Farrell 7,324,000 23 LawKingdon Architecture 7,250,000 24 Cooper Carry 4,000,988 25 API 3,800,000 26 Massa Montalto Architects 3,482,000 27 Beyer Blinder Belle 3,205,403 28 RS&H 2,450,000 29 Smallwood, Reynolds, Stewart, Stewart & Associates 2,391,617 30 Vocon 2,366,525 31 Gresham, Smith and Partners 2,299,000 32 Cuningham Group Architecture 2,166,411 33 ai Design Group 2,093,530 34 Solomon Cordwell Buenz 1,700,000 35 LPA 1,637,397 36 BLTa 1,302,000 37 NBBJ 1,285,000 38 Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates 1,280,000 39 TK Architects 1,155,876 40 LS3P 1,061,129 41 Ratio Architects 990,326 42 Eppstein Uhen Architects 954,480 43 RDH Interests 922,242 44 Carrier Johnson + Culture 702,235 45 Environetics 625,747 46 Colkitt & Company 600,000 47 GBBN Architects 558,000 48 Harvard Jolly Architecture 533,943 49 VOA Associates 521,057 50 JRS Architect 490,000 51 WATG | Wimberly Interiors 472,000 52 SchenkelShultz Architecture 453,000 53 Nelson 393,822 54 Goodwyn Mills & Cawood 378,423 55 Wight & Company 371,000 56 Moody Nolan 361,308 57 PGAL 350,300 58 Parkhill, Smith & Cooper 336,000 59 Montroy Andersen DeMarco 310,000 60 Becker Morgan Group 287,996 61 PHX Architecture 280,000 62 Morris Architects 260,000 63 BRPH 225,000 64 Mithun 210,000 65 FitzGerald Associates Architects 151,500 66 Clark Nexsen 143,328 67 Commonwealth Architects 141,268 68 Baskervill 115,284 69 Skidmore, Owings & Merrill 108,913 70 Adache Group Architects 100,000 71 Corgan 74,847 72 Hnedak Bobo Group 72,000 73 Hoefer Wysocki Architecture 70,000 74 Niles Bolton Associates 65,728 75 ATA Beilharz Architects 60,180 76 Hensley Lamkin Rachel 50,000 77 KZF Design 47,356 78 Heery International 45,840 79 TEG Architects 12,163

 

 

Top Retail Engineering Firms

Rank Company 2013 Retail Revenue 1 Jacobs $182,720,000 2 AECOM Technology Corp. 105,890,000 3 Henderson Engineers 43,369,857 4 URS Corp. 36,003,188 5 Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates 19,090,000 6 Parsons Brinckerhoff 16,431,889 7 Dewberry 9,513,612 8 Thornton Tomasetti 8,339,454 9 Wallace Engineering 7,667,000 10 KLH Engineers 6,506,748 11 Shive-Hattery 6,232,480 12 Arup 5,674,014 13 Dunham Associates 5,500,000 14 Highland Associates 4,600,000 15 Magnusson Klemencic Associates 4,133,492 16 Coffman Engineers 3,992,285 17 Hixson Architecture, Engineering, Interiors 3,100,000 18 Davis, Bowen & Friedel 2,748,648 19 Leidos 2,520,000 20 WSP Group 2,270,000 21 Fishbeck, Thompson, Carr & Huber 2,200,000 22 AKF Group 2,140,000 23 French & Parrello Associates 1,985,000 24 KJWW Engineering Consultants 1,686,418 25 RDK Engineers 1,670,000 26 Martin/Martin 1,614,144 27 Interface Engineering 1,573,325 28 Simpson Gumpertz & Heger 1,570,000 29 Aon Fire Protection Engineering Corp. 1,500,000 30 CTLGroup 1,450,000 31 SSOE Group 1,423,552 32 Graef 1,189,813 33 Bala Consulting Engineers 1,051,000 34 M-E Engineers 1,000,000 35 Heapy Engineering 969,445 36 Wick Fisher White 893,105 37 OLA Consulting Engineers 888,800 38 Walter P Moore and Associates 847,312 39 TTG 732,500 40 DeSimone Consulting Engineers 691,425 41 H.F. Lenz 652,000 42 Paulus, Sokolowski and Sartor 650,000 43 I. C. Thomasson Associates 600,000 44 Vanderweil Engineers 576,000 45 Stanley Consultants 447,960 46 Zak Companies 422,811 47 Glumac 421,563 48 Allen & Shariff 400,000 49 KCI Technologies 400,000 50 Spectrum Engineers 345,820 51 TLC Engineering for Architecture 342,071 52 G&W Engineering Corp. 217,100 53 Sparling 204,890 54 Total Building Commissioning 125,702 55 Apogee Consulting Group 115,325 56 Barge Waggoner Sumner & Cannon 100,000 57 Brinjac Engineering 80,270 58 GHT Limited 75,000

 

 

Top Retail Construction Firms

Rank Company 2013 Retail Revenue 1 PCL Construction $517,371,436 2 Whiting-Turner Contracting Co., The 479,057,948 3 Shawmut Design and Construction 386,000,000 4 EMJ Corp. 317,000,000 5 Turner Construction 236,380,000 6 Balfour Beatty US 195,847,685 7 Lend Lease 150,997,000 8 Yates Companies, The 122,000,000 9 Hawkins Construction 98,500,000 10 Gray Construction 97,770,000 11 O'Neil Industries/W.E. O'Neil 93,703,312 12 Beck Group, The 81,576,752 13 Power Construction 78,000,000 14 S. M. Wilson & Co. 72,877,695 15 E.W. Howell 71,900,000 16 Structure Tone 71,080,000 17 DPR Construction 70,199,893 18 Choate Construction 68,627,625 19 KBE Building Corp. 68,022,822 20 Ryan Companies US 67,191,615 21 Weitz Company, The 64,819,854 22 Pepper Construction 62,870,000 23 JE Dunn Construction 62,738,348 24 Graycor 59,864,863 25 Hoar Construction 53,500,000 26 Hill & Wilkinson 51,935,000 27 McCarthy Holdings 50,650,000 28 Management Resource Systems 45,255,861 29 Leopardo Companies 39,729,783 30 Weis Builders 37,993,000 31 URS Corp. 36,003,188 32 Layton Construction 35,900,000 33 Clark Group 35,131,316 34 Brasfield & Gorrie 33,249,173 35 EBCO General Contractor 33,134,000 36 JLL 30,323,117 37 Paric Corp. 25,000,000 38 Skanska USA 24,038,261 39 C.W. Driver 23,670,000 40 James G. Davis Construction 22,850,344 41 Walbridge 22,200,000 42 Hill International 21,000,000 43 Tutor Perini Corp. 20,562,786 44 Bomel Construction 19,179,585 45 Kraus-Anderson Construction 19,000,000 46 Clune Construction 17,825,626 47 Austin Commercial 17,584,385 48 CORE Construction Group 17,295,729 49 Parsons Brinckerhoff 16,431,889 50 Hoffman Construction 14,000,000 51 LeChase Construction Services 13,120,000 52 Gilbane 12,521,010 53 IMC Construction 12,332,000 54 Kitchell Corp. 11,602,544 55 Suffolk Construction 10,523,993 56 McShane Companies, The 6,599,886 57 Manhattan Construction 6,170,000 58 Bernards 4,700,000 59 Adolfson & Peterson Construction 3,534,704 60 Robins & Morton 3,351,771 61 Batson-Cook 2,741,450 62 Stalco Construction 2,310,600 63 Bette Companies, The 1,548,000 64 Walsh Group, The 1,485,547 65 W. M. Jordan Company 965,753 66 Douglas Company, The 772,135 67 Allen & Shariff 400,000 68 Alberici Constructors 156,054

 

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