Friday 26 January 2018

Real Estate Notebook: Growing startup Flexport close to choosing building for 300-employee office – Atlanta Business Chronicle

A Silicon Valley start-up valued at more than $900 million is about to choose a building for its East Coast operations in Atlanta.

Flexport, which closed a $110 million funding round last fall, has narrowed its search for the 300-employee office to two Midtown properties, the 55-story Bank of America Plaza and 715 Peachtree.

Bank of America Plaza has emerged as the favorite, according to sources familiar with the process.

A decision could come by the end of the first quarter. Flexport is expected to need at least two floors of office space.

Atlanta Business Chronicle reported plans for the startup’s $100 million expansion here last year.

It will be interesting to watch how Flexport, which plans to take on giant Amazon.com in the freight forwarding business, expands its operations in Atlanta, one of nation’s largest logistics hubs. Amazon is also growing its transportation services unit in Midtown’s Atlantic Station, putting the potential freight-forwarding rivals in close proximity to each other.

Flexport, which is currently housed in WeWork coworking space at Midtown’s Colony Square, is being represented in lease negotiations by Taylor Senter, with Newmark Knight Frank. Senter could not comment. CBRE, which is leasing Bank of America Plaza on behalf of landlord Shorenstein Properties LLC, also declined comment.

Mooney new market leader

Cousins Properties Inc. has named a new managing director for Atlanta.

Cousins, Atlanta’s largest owner of office space with more than 6.8 million square feet, promoted Matt Mooney, who had been leading the Phoenix regional team for the past two years. He also held that role with his previous company, Parkway Properties, which Cousins acquired two years ago in a $2 billion deal.

CLOSER LOOK

Largest leases of the fourth quarter:

1. Kaiser Permanente, 187,000 square feet, Piedmont Center 9 and 10, renewal, brokers: JLL team including Josh Hirsh and Nicole Littleton

2. Secureworks, 141,299 square feet, 1 Concourse Pkwy NE, 141,299 square feet, renewal

3. Floor and Decor, 106,051 square feet, 2233 Lake Park Drive, renewal and expansion

4. Hall Booth Smith, 76,520 square feet, 191 Peachtree, renewal/expansion

5. Cox Communications, 58,000 square feet, 7000 Central Parkway,

Source: Market data, CBRE Inc., JLL

In Atlanta, Mooney will have responsibility for leasing, property operations, investments and business development.

During his 11 years in Phoenix, his team completed large leases with Amazon, ADP, Silicon Valley Bank and Symantec. Mooney also sourced more than $400 million in acquisitions and new developments.

“The strongest market that we’ve had is Tempe (Ariz.) within the Phoenix area,” said Cousins Chairman and CEO Larry Gellerstedt.

“Tempe drives the highest rents in our entire portfolio,” he said. “It sits right on the Arizona State campus. It’s the part of Phoenix you can get to by rail. It is land constrained. And, it has been a mecca for technology companies.”

Mooney will find similar qualities in Atlanta’s Midtown, where Georgia Tech and NCR Corp. are expanding in a walkable neighborhood connected to MARTA rail and Piedmont Park.

In Buckhead, the affluent Atlanta neighborhood known for luxury shopping, million-dollar homes and glossy high-rises, the remaining number of undeveloped sites for office towers continues to shrink.

Cousins is Buckhead’s largest office landlord and maintains its headquarters there.

Thad Ellis, Cousins’ previous Atlanta market leader and one of the city’s top commercial real estate dealmakers, will refocus on leasing the company’s nearly 6.9-million-square-foot Atlanta office portfolio. He will be part of a team including other longtime Atlanta brokerage leaders, Jeff Dils and Bill Hollett.

Condo conversion

Here’s a blast from the past — a new Atlanta apartment tower is converting to condos.

Preserve Properties broke ground last year on The Sutton, a 21-story for-rent project in the Buckhead Village. The 151-unit tower at 2965 Peachtree was underway near a spate of other, new apartment high-rises.

Preserve will now offer one-to-three bedroom units starting at $500,000, with the most expensive units at $1.4 million. It’s also increasing the size of the average unit to 1,700 square feet. PNC Bank National Association is providing $49.9 million in construction financing, according to Fulton County property records.

The conversion is a reminder of the early 2000s, when apartment developers shifted to for-rent projects and the intown condo market started to take off. It’s worth noting that today’s construction lending environment for condo towers is vastly more constrained.

It will be interesting to see how demand for The Sutton unfolds.

Preserve’s John Draper said the idea is upscale condos at an attainable price. At $500 a foot, The Sutton is just over the entry level Buckhead market for new mid-or-high-rise residential towers, which is closer to $450 a foot.

Preserve’s timing of the project may be solid. For now, Buckhead condo owners don’t have many opportunities to “move up” to relatively affordable towers. The supply of those units has been kept in check since the recession ended, as high-rise residential developers tested demand mostly at uber luxury prices.

The intown apartment market will also be closely watched. It has been saturated by thousands of new high-rise units, and even though growth is expected to drive demand for that supply, rent growth, which has averaged 5 to 7 percent in recent years, is likely to slow.

If Preserve is able to generate sales at $500 a foot, it may convince other developers with apartment towers to convert to condo projects.

Reese Vanderbilt & Associates is the project architect for The Sutton. Barrett Design is the interior designer.

Gilbane Building Co. is the general contractor.

Atlanta Fine Homes Sotheby’s International Realty is handling the sales and marketing.

Morgan Stanley office growing

A financial giant is once again expanding in one of Buckhead’s trophy towers.

Morgan Stanley upped its total square footage in the 27-story Terminus 100 building by more than a full-floor, or about 33,000 square feet.

It now leases almost 20 percent of the 655,000-square-foot pinstriped tower at Peachtree and Piedmont Roads, which was designed by HKS Inc. and Duda/Paine Architects LLP.

It’s the second expansion for Morgan Stanley at Terminus 100 in barely over a year. In December, 2016, the company signed a 10-year renewal and expansion for 86,000 square feet.

It’s been a tenant there since 2006.

The latest deal with Morgan Stanley continues leasing momentum for the tower, which was developed by Cousins Properties Inc and is one of almost 7 million square feet of Atlanta office projects owned by the real estate company. In December, WeWork Companies signed a 14-year lease at Terminus 100 for 48,000 square feet.

The property is now 94 percent leased.

Cousins, however, will eventually have a big hole to fill after one of the tower’s largest tenants, CBRE Group Inc., confirmed last year that it will move to a newer Buckhead building, Three Alliance Center.

Cousins is Buckhead’s largest office landlord, with properties that include Terminus 100 and 200, 3344 Peachtree, Tower Place 200, and Capital City Plaza.

A new price record in Chamblee

Sarofim Realty Advisors has purchased the new Whole Foods-anchored shopping center in Chamblee for almost $68 million.

The Dallas, Texas-based real estate company, representing an undisclosed an out-of-state institutional investor, paid about $639 a square foot for the project, known as Peachtree Station. Tenants also include Starbucks, The Cook’s Warehouse, Zoe’s Kitchen and Chipotle Mexican Grill.

The purchase price of Peachtree Station is notable, considering that Shops Around Lenox, next Buckhead’s Lenox Square mall, sold almost four years ago for $71.8 million, or $575 per square foot.

It shows that trophy retail properties on Peachtree aren’t limited to Buckhead anymore. Peachtree Station is at 5001 Peachtree Boulevard, for years better known as Peachtree Industrial Boulevard.

S.J. Collins Enterprises developed and sold the property. Fain Hicks of Cushman & Wakefield represented S.J. Collins in the transaction.

“Peachtree Station was a fantastic project for us in the fast-growing Chamblee market, “ said Jeff Garrison of S.J. Collins.

A development renaissance has come to Chamblee — an industrial area long shaped by planes, trains and automobiles — that’s transforming the once blue-collar town into a walkable community with a blossoming cultural identity.

A year ago, Atlanta Business Chronicle reported that more than $360 million worth of new projects were in the works for Chamblee. That included about 1,200 apartments, townhomes, senior housing, and office, retail and restaurant space.

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Friday 19 January 2018

Drive Carts, Not Cars

There are very few car thefts in Peachtree City, Ga. There are, however, more than a few cart thefts. This planned town 25 miles south of Atlanta has 90 miles of golf-cart paths and 9,000 registered carts, one for every four of its 36,000 residents. About two-thirds of the households own at least one. Kids drive them to school (no driver’s license is required for a cart). Seniors who’ve given up their cars drive their carts to the doctor and to go shopping. And of the 80 motor vehicles reported stolen last year, 72 were golf carts, which sell new from about $5,000 at the three Peachtree City cart-sales shops; used carts run about $2,000.

The city’s asphalt cart paths form an alternative network to the roads they sometimes parallel or go under or over. But more than that, they tie together this town of many subdivisions in a sort of road-less-traveled utopia where life proceeds, gently, in the slow lane.

Grocery shopping in style. Brian Finke

“Getting on a golf cart and going to the grocery store or a restaurant, you’re not in this big rush,” Mayor Harold Logsdon says. “You’re traveling along at 15 or 20 miles an hour through the path system. It just kind of slows things down, which is a good thing.”

Peachtree City happens to have three golf courses, where golf carts are seldom rented because players bring their own. The newer shopping centers all have parking spaces reserved for golf carts. And the high school has 200 golf-cart spaces for students — not nearly enough, as it turns out.

For the Not-So-Fast Lane: Student parking at the high school. Brian Finke

The interstitial trail network has grown with the town, which consisted of four villages when it was founded in 1959. As new subdivisions sprout, homeowners demand links to the trails. Adjacent towns have also begun to build paths that connect to those of Peachtree City, where a favorite cart destination is a concert at the city’s amphitheater.

“It’s kind of a way of life here,” says Steven Rosen, a real estate agent whose home is a block away from a golf-cart trail. “It makes it more of a community. You’re not living in a subdivision on your own. You’re living in a subdivision connected to another subdivision connected to another subdivision.”

The golf carts also offer a greener life. They save on gas, since almost all of them are electric, as well as reducing noise and air pollution. A 2005 study calls Peachtree City “An American Prototopia: Or, Peachtree City as an Inadvertent, Sustainable Solution to Urban Sprawl.” This portentous-sounding study was done by a couple of London academics. With gas prices now over $3 a gallon, and in some places $4, could this be the future?

Source Article

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Saturday 13 January 2018

MLK Jr Day 2018 In Atlanta: Prayer Services, March, Rally Events

ATLANTA, GA — As the city that Martin Luther King Jr. called home, it is only fitting that Atlanta has a full slate of activities scheduled to observe his legacy on Monday.

This year, 2018, is the 50th anniversary of King’s shooting death on April 4, 1968. Monday would have been King’s 89th birthday.

From prayer services to road races to marches, there will be plenty going on in Atlanta to observe the day. The King family will be present for services and events at the King Center, as will state and local political leaders.

Here’s a look at some MLK Jr. Day events in Atlanta for 2018.

Sunday, Jan. 14

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MLK Race For The Dream (Marathon, Half-Marathon, 20-Mile Bike Ride)

Starting Sunday at 6:30 a.m., the races are sponsored by the Martin Luther King Jr. Drive Merchants Association. They start at Booker T. Washington High School, at 45 Whitehouse Dr. All participants will receive a finisher’s medal and there will be a Finish Line Festival after the races are done.

Monday, Jan. 15

At King’s church, Ebenezer Baptist, the service runs from 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Speakers will include Bernice A. King, Pastor David Yonggi Cho, Deborah A. Bartlett, Lt. Gov. Casey Cagle and Atlanta Mayor Keisha Lance Bottoms. The church is ast 101 Jackson St. NE.

Starting at 2 p.m. at Auburn Avenue and Peachtree Street, the march is free and open to the public. The rally will be held on Auburn Avenue and focus on issued including education, transportation, housing and environmental justice.

From 10 a.m.-2 p.m., the conference will be held at the IBEW Auditorium at 501 Pulliam St. James Edward Orange, who was one of King’s first field staff members, founded the March Committee. Each year, he hosts the conference to mobilize young leaders. It is free, but registration by email is required.

From 11 a.m.-2 p.m., the children’s museum will host a special readers’ theater program highlighting leaders of the civil rights movement, many of whom marched alongside Dr. King. At noon, speaker Jerry G. White will recite King’s "I Have A Dream" speech, which has become an annual tradition at the children’s museum.

The center’s free program includes a screening of the film "A Trek to the Water’s Edge," a documentary of the Atlanta student movement of the 1960s. There also will be an interactive theater experience simulating the experience of Freedom Riders during the era (parental guidance is advised). The center is at 130 West Paces Ferry Rd.

At Piedmont Park, music begins at 8 a.m. and the run begins at 8:45 a.m. The Peachtree Road Race qualifier is also a fundraiser for community programs. The post-race party will feature music and other entertainment focused on King’s legacy.

Image via Pixabay

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Saturday 6 January 2018

Roy Lynn Mathis, age 74, of Peachtree City

Roy Mathis

Roy Lynn Mathis, age 74, of Peachtree City, Ga. passed away peacefully on December 30, 2017 under the loving care of his wife, Anna, and the tender care of Southwest Christian Care Hospice.

Originally from San Marcos, Texas, Roy’s early career in Sr. Management in the heavy construction field, moved him to LA, San Francisco, Phoenix and finally to Georgia in 1993. Roy’s 2nd career in Real Estate began in 1998, and he enjoyed great success and amazing long-term friendships with his clients and co-Realtors. Roy was always known to brighten a room, bring a smile and laughter wherever he went. He was an active member of the Fayette County Board of Realtors, representing his affiliation with the Harry Norman, Realtors “family”, in Peachtree City.

Roy married his wife, Anna Marie (Trujillo) in 1975 and they were inseparable from the start, eventually even working together as a Real Estate team until his retirement in 2014.

Roy is also survived by his sons, Kevin Lynn Mathis (Fonda) of Seguin, Texas, Chad Eric Mathis (Amber) Virginia Beach, Va., and grandsons Kyle Mathis & Brandon Mathis, of Seguin and Virginia Beach, respectively.

The Mathis family would like to extend their deepest gratitude to the staff of Southwest Christian Care Hospice, who provided extraordinary care to Roy during his final days. Thanks also to Kindred Home Health Care & Hospice for their exceptional care.

A Celebration of Life will be held at a date to be announced. In lieu of flowers, the family requests that memorial contributions be made to Southwest Christian Care Hospice, 7225 Lester Rd., Union City, Ga. 30291.

The Mathis family is being assisted by Georgia Cremation, 1086 Hwy 54 West, Fayetteville. Messages of condolence may be left at www.GeorgiaCremation.com.

Source Article

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