Metro is having a bad year.
SafeTrack surges this summer forced weeks-long closures and several
headline-grabbing incidents raised public concerns about the rail's safety.
Last week's ridership report only further exacerbates Metro's strugges: it
showed an 11% ridership drop in the most recent quarter and a 7% year-to-date
drop over 2015.
Despite this bad news, DC's top
developers and brokers have little concern about building and drawing tenants
to Metro-centric developments.
"I think Metro still checks a
box, a very important box," Douglas Development principal Norman Jemal,
above, tells Bisnow. "In many cases it’s a threshold issue for developers.
Residents, apartment dwellers and office tenants all gravitate to Metro...I
don’t think any developers read this ridership report and said, 'Oh, I don’t
need to be near Metro.'"
Norman remains confident in public
transportation as a viable alternative to driving in DC. He is so confident, in
fact, that Douglas Development's H Street mixed-use project will have just five
parking spots for 30 units and will instead offer a $100 SmarTrip card and a
Bikeshare membership to tenants.
Stonebridge Carras principal Doug Firstenberg says he
views this year's decline as a blip and is more focused on the long term, where
he predicts Metro will be successful—in part, because it has to be.
"We’re not making any adjustments
to our underwriting of TOD because of where Metro is today," Doug tells
Bisnow. "We fundamentally believe Metro is the most important issue facing
the region, therefore people are going to commit the resources and the needs to
make Metro work."
Doug says he doesn't focus on the
overall ridership for the entire rail system, rather he looks at what stations
and lines have the most growth and where certain asset classes are performing
well. "What we look at is different lines and different demographics,"
Doug says. "The Green Line is a heavily residential line because it
doesn’t have as many fundamentals for office, but it's got great residential
metrics. When were looking for office sites—we may be crazy, but we still
do—the Red and Orange/Blue lines are pretty good."
Doug and Norman will both speak at
Bisnow's BMAC East event on October 20. On the brokerage side, tenant reps say
the demand for space near Metro stations has not dissipated due to falling
ridership. Cushman & Wakefield senior director Tom McHugh, above, says the
top 10 largest relocations in NoVa this year have all been signed in offices
within a quarter-mile of a Metro stop. "We're seeing tenants in general
wanting to be near Metro, which doesn’t necessarily address Metro ridership,
but certainly there is an interest in companies wanting to be proximate to
Metro," Tom says. "Now the next piece of the puzzle is once a tenant
moves near Metro, are their employees using Metro? That’s a different
question."
John Schlegel (left, with colleague
John Lugar) says the combination of frustration with Metro, alternative
transportation methods and people living closer to work has caused a dip in
ridership but doesn't change the fundamental need for companies to be near the
Metro.
"While ridership is probably
down, I don’t think demand for public transportation is going to dissipate over
the long term," John says. "You’ve got people who work downtown from
all parts of the greater DC area, providing those employees access to public
transportation is a fundamental I don’t think will ever change."
Metro is having a bad
year. SafeTrack surges this summer forced weeks-long closures and
several headline-grabbing incidents raised public concerns about the
rail's safety. Last week's ridership report only further exacerbates
Metro's strugges: it showed an 11% ridership drop in the most recent
quarter and a 7% year-to-date drop over 2015.
Developers, Brokers Not Worried About Metro Ridership Decline
Bisnow
Despite this bad news, DC's top developers and brokers have little
concern about building and drawing tenants to Metro-centric
developments.
"I think Metro still checks a box, a very important box," Douglas
Development principal Norman Jemal, above, tells Bisnow. "In many cases
it’s a threshold issue for developers. Residents, apartment dwellers and
office tenants all gravitate to Metro...I don’t think any developers
read this ridership report and said, 'Oh, I don’t need to be near
Metro.'"
Norman remains confident in public transportation as a viable
alternative to driving in DC. He is so confident, in fact, that Douglas
Development's H Street mixed-use project will have just five parking
spots for 30 units and will instead offer a $100 SmarTrip card and a
Bikeshare membership to tenants.
Developers, Brokers Not Worried About Metro Ridership Decline
Bisnow
Stonebridge Carras principal Doug Firstenberg says he views this year's
decline as a blip and is more focused on the long term, where he
predicts Metro will be successful—in part, because it has to be.
"We’re not making any adjustments to our underwriting of TOD because of
where Metro is today," Doug tells Bisnow. "We fundamentally believe
Metro is the most important issue facing the region, therefore people
are going to commit the resources and the needs to make Metro work."
Doug says he doesn't focus on the overall ridership for the entire rail
system, rather he looks at what stations and lines have the most growth
and where certain asset classes are performing well.
"What we look at is different lines and different demographics," Doug
says. "The Green Line is a heavily residential line because it doesn’t
have as many fundamentals for office, but it's got great residential
metrics. When were looking for office sites—we may be crazy, but we
still do—the Red and Orange/Blue lines are pretty good."
Doug and Norman will both speak at Bisnow's BMAC East event on October
20.
Cushman & Wakefield Tom McHugh
Courtesy: Tom McHugh
On the brokerage side, tenant reps say the demand for space near Metro
stations has not dissipated due to falling ridership.
Cushman & Wakefield senior director Tom McHugh, above, says the top
10 largest relocations in NoVa this year have all been signed in offices
within a quarter-mile of a Metro stop.
"We're seeing tenants in general wanting to be near Metro, which doesn’t
necessarily address Metro ridership, but certainly there is an interest
in companies wanting to be proximate to Metro," Tom says. "Now the next
piece of the puzzle is once a tenant moves near Metro, are their
employees using Metro? That’s a different question."
John Schlegel John Lugar Transwestern
Transwestern
Transwestern's John Schlegel (left, with colleague John Lugar) says the
combination of frustration with Metro, alternative transportation
methods and people living closer to work has caused a dip in ridership
but doesn't change the fundamental need for companies to be near the
Metro.
"While ridership is probably down, I don’t think demand for public
transportation is going to dissipate over the long term," John says.
"You’ve got people who work downtown from all parts of the greater DC
area, providing those employees access to public transportation is a
fundamental I don’t think will ever change."
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Metro is having a bad
year. SafeTrack surges this summer forced weeks-long closures and
several headline-grabbing incidents raised public concerns about the
rail's safety. Last week's ridership report only further exacerbates
Metro's strugges: it showed an 11% ridership drop in the most recent
quarter and a 7% year-to-date drop over 2015.
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Metro is having a bad
year. SafeTrack surges this summer forced weeks-long closures and
several headline-grabbing incidents raised public concerns about the
rail's safety. Last week's ridership report only further exacerbates
Metro's strugges: it showed an 11% ridership drop in the most recent
quarter and a 7% year-to-date drop over 2015.
Developers, Brokers Not Worried About Metro Ridership Decline
Bisnow
Despite this bad news, DC's top developers and brokers have little
concern about building and drawing tenants to Metro-centric
developments.
"I think Metro still checks a box, a very important box," Douglas
Development principal Norman Jemal, above, tells Bisnow. "In many cases
it’s a threshold issue for developers. Residents, apartment dwellers and
office tenants all gravitate to Metro...I don’t think any developers
read this ridership report and said, 'Oh, I don’t need to be near
Metro.'"
Norman remains confident in public transportation as a viable
alternative to driving in DC. He is so confident, in fact, that Douglas
Development's H Street mixed-use project will have just five parking
spots for 30 units and will instead offer a $100 SmarTrip card and a
Bikeshare membership to tenants.
Developers, Brokers Not Worried About Metro Ridership Decline
Bisnow
Stonebridge Carras principal Doug Firstenberg says he views this year's
decline as a blip and is more focused on the long term, where he
predicts Metro will be successful—in part, because it has to be.
"We’re not making any adjustments to our underwriting of TOD because of
where Metro is today," Doug tells Bisnow. "We fundamentally believe
Metro is the most important issue facing the region, therefore people
are going to commit the resources and the needs to make Metro work."
Doug says he doesn't focus on the overall ridership for the entire rail
system, rather he looks at what stations and lines have the most growth
and where certain asset classes are performing well.
"What we look at is different lines and different demographics," Doug
says. "The Green Line is a heavily residential line because it doesn’t
have as many fundamentals for office, but it's got great residential
metrics. When were looking for office sites—we may be crazy, but we
still do—the Red and Orange/Blue lines are pretty good."
Doug and Norman will both speak at Bisnow's BMAC East event on October
20.
Cushman & Wakefield Tom McHugh
Courtesy: Tom McHugh
On the brokerage side, tenant reps say the demand for space near Metro
stations has not dissipated due to falling ridership.
Cushman & Wakefield senior director Tom McHugh, above, says the top
10 largest relocations in NoVa this year have all been signed in offices
within a quarter-mile of a Metro stop.
"We're seeing tenants in general wanting to be near Metro, which doesn’t
necessarily address Metro ridership, but certainly there is an interest
in companies wanting to be proximate to Metro," Tom says. "Now the next
piece of the puzzle is once a tenant moves near Metro, are their
employees using Metro? That’s a different question."
John Schlegel John Lugar Transwestern
Transwestern
Transwestern's John Schlegel (left, with colleague John Lugar) says the
combination of frustration with Metro, alternative transportation
methods and people living closer to work has caused a dip in ridership
but doesn't change the fundamental need for companies to be near the
Metro.
"While ridership is probably down, I don’t think demand for public
transportation is going to dissipate over the long term," John says.
"You’ve got people who work downtown from all parts of the greater DC
area, providing those employees access to public transportation is a
fundamental I don’t think will ever change."
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Metro is having a bad
year. SafeTrack surges this summer forced weeks-long closures and
several headline-grabbing incidents raised public concerns about the
rail's safety. Last week's ridership report only further exacerbates
Metro's strugges: it showed an 11% ridership drop in the most recent
quarter and a 7% year-to-date drop over 2015.
Developers, Brokers Not Worried About Metro Ridership Decline
Bisnow
Despite this bad news, DC's top developers and brokers have little
concern about building and drawing tenants to Metro-centric
developments.
"I think Metro still checks a box, a very important box," Douglas
Development principal Norman Jemal, above, tells Bisnow. "In many cases
it’s a threshold issue for developers. Residents, apartment dwellers and
office tenants all gravitate to Metro...I don’t think any developers
read this ridership report and said, 'Oh, I don’t need to be near
Metro.'"
Norman remains confident in public transportation as a viable
alternative to driving in DC. He is so confident, in fact, that Douglas
Development's H Street mixed-use project will have just five parking
spots for 30 units and will instead offer a $100 SmarTrip card and a
Bikeshare membership to tenants.
Developers, Brokers Not Worried About Metro Ridership Decline
Bisnow
Stonebridge Carras principal Doug Firstenberg says he views this year's
decline as a blip and is more focused on the long term, where he
predicts Metro will be successful—in part, because it has to be.
"We’re not making any adjustments to our underwriting of TOD because of
where Metro is today," Doug tells Bisnow. "We fundamentally believe
Metro is the most important issue facing the region, therefore people
are going to commit the resources and the needs to make Metro work."
Doug says he doesn't focus on the overall ridership for the entire rail
system, rather he looks at what stations and lines have the most growth
and where certain asset classes are performing well.
"What we look at is different lines and different demographics," Doug
says. "The Green Line is a heavily residential line because it doesn’t
have as many fundamentals for office, but it's got great residential
metrics. When were looking for office sites—we may be crazy, but we
still do—the Red and Orange/Blue lines are pretty good."
Doug and Norman will both speak at Bisnow's BMAC East event on October
20.
Cushman & Wakefield Tom McHugh
Courtesy: Tom McHugh
On the brokerage side, tenant reps say the demand for space near Metro
stations has not dissipated due to falling ridership.
Cushman & Wakefield senior director Tom McHugh, above, says the top
10 largest relocations in NoVa this year have all been signed in offices
within a quarter-mile of a Metro stop.
"We're seeing tenants in general wanting to be near Metro, which doesn’t
necessarily address Metro ridership, but certainly there is an interest
in companies wanting to be proximate to Metro," Tom says. "Now the next
piece of the puzzle is once a tenant moves near Metro, are their
employees using Metro? That’s a different question."
John Schlegel John Lugar Transwestern
Transwestern
Transwestern's John Schlegel (left, with colleague John Lugar) says the
combination of frustration with Metro, alternative transportation
methods and people living closer to work has caused a dip in ridership
but doesn't change the fundamental need for companies to be near the
Metro.
"While ridership is probably down, I don’t think demand for public
transportation is going to dissipate over the long term," John says.
"You’ve got people who work downtown from all parts of the greater DC
area, providing those employees access to public transportation is a
fundamental I don’t think will ever change."
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Metro is having a bad
year. SafeTrack surges this summer forced weeks-long closures and
several headline-grabbing incidents raised public concerns about the
rail's safety. Last week's ridership report only further exacerbates
Metro's strugges: it showed an 11% ridership drop in the most recent
quarter and a 7% year-to-date drop over 2015.
Developers, Brokers Not Worried About Metro Ridership Decline
Bisnow
Despite this bad news, DC's top developers and brokers have little
concern about building and drawing tenants to Metro-centric
developments.
"I think Metro still checks a box, a very important box," Douglas
Development principal Norman Jemal, above, tells Bisnow. "In many cases
it’s a threshold issue for developers. Residents, apartment dwellers and
office tenants all gravitate to Metro...I don’t think any developers
read this ridership report and said, 'Oh, I don’t need to be near
Metro.'"
Norman remains confident in public transportation as a viable
alternative to driving in DC. He is so confident, in fact, that Douglas
Development's H Street mixed-use project will have just five parking
spots for 30 units and will instead offer a $100 SmarTrip card and a
Bikeshare membership to tenants.
Developers, Brokers Not Worried About Metro Ridership Decline
Bisnow
Stonebridge Carras principal Doug Firstenberg says he views this year's
decline as a blip and is more focused on the long term, where he
predicts Metro will be successful—in part, because it has to be.
"We’re not making any adjustments to our underwriting of TOD because of
where Metro is today," Doug tells Bisnow. "We fundamentally believe
Metro is the most important issue facing the region, therefore people
are going to commit the resources and the needs to make Metro work."
Doug says he doesn't focus on the overall ridership for the entire rail
system, rather he looks at what stations and lines have the most growth
and where certain asset classes are performing well.
"What we look at is different lines and different demographics," Doug
says. "The Green Line is a heavily residential line because it doesn’t
have as many fundamentals for office, but it's got great residential
metrics. When were looking for office sites—we may be crazy, but we
still do—the Red and Orange/Blue lines are pretty good."
Doug and Norman will both speak at Bisnow's BMAC East event on October
20.
Cushman & Wakefield Tom McHugh
Courtesy: Tom McHugh
On the brokerage side, tenant reps say the demand for space near Metro
stations has not dissipated due to falling ridership.
Cushman & Wakefield senior director Tom McHugh, above, says the top
10 largest relocations in NoVa this year have all been signed in offices
within a quarter-mile of a Metro stop.
"We're seeing tenants in general wanting to be near Metro, which doesn’t
necessarily address Metro ridership, but certainly there is an interest
in companies wanting to be proximate to Metro," Tom says. "Now the next
piece of the puzzle is once a tenant moves near Metro, are their
employees using Metro? That’s a different question."
John Schlegel John Lugar Transwestern
Transwestern
Transwestern's John Schlegel (left, with colleague John Lugar) says the
combination of frustration with Metro, alternative transportation
methods and people living closer to work has caused a dip in ridership
but doesn't change the fundamental need for companies to be near the
Metro.
"While ridership is probably down, I don’t think demand for public
transportation is going to dissipate over the long term," John says.
"You’ve got people who work downtown from all parts of the greater DC
area, providing those employees access to public transportation is a
fundamental I don’t think will ever change."
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Metro is having a bad
year. SafeTrack surges this summer forced weeks-long closures and
several headline-grabbing incidents raised public concerns about the
rail's safety. Last week's ridership report only further exacerbates
Metro's strugges: it showed an 11% ridership drop in the most recent
quarter and a 7% year-to-date drop over 2015.
Developers, Brokers Not Worried About Metro Ridership Decline
Bisnow
Despite this bad news, DC's top developers and brokers have little
concern about building and drawing tenants to Metro-centric
developments.
"I think Metro still checks a box, a very important box," Douglas
Development principal Norman Jemal, above, tells Bisnow. "In many cases
it’s a threshold issue for developers. Residents, apartment dwellers and
office tenants all gravitate to Metro...I don’t think any developers
read this ridership report and said, 'Oh, I don’t need to be near
Metro.'"
Norman remains confident in public transportation as a viable
alternative to driving in DC. He is so confident, in fact, that Douglas
Development's H Street mixed-use project will have just five parking
spots for 30 units and will instead offer a $100 SmarTrip card and a
Bikeshare membership to tenants.
Developers, Brokers Not Worried About Metro Ridership Decline
Bisnow
Stonebridge Carras principal Doug Firstenberg says he views this year's
decline as a blip and is more focused on the long term, where he
predicts Metro will be successful—in part, because it has to be.
"We’re not making any adjustments to our underwriting of TOD because of
where Metro is today," Doug tells Bisnow. "We fundamentally believe
Metro is the most important issue facing the region, therefore people
are going to commit the resources and the needs to make Metro work."
Doug says he doesn't focus on the overall ridership for the entire rail
system, rather he looks at what stations and lines have the most growth
and where certain asset classes are performing well.
"What we look at is different lines and different demographics," Doug
says. "The Green Line is a heavily residential line because it doesn’t
have as many fundamentals for office, but it's got great residential
metrics. When were looking for office sites—we may be crazy, but we
still do—the Red and Orange/Blue lines are pretty good."
Doug and Norman will both speak at Bisnow's BMAC East event on October
20.
Cushman & Wakefield Tom McHugh
Courtesy: Tom McHugh
On the brokerage side, tenant reps say the demand for space near Metro
stations has not dissipated due to falling ridership.
Cushman & Wakefield senior director Tom McHugh, above, says the top
10 largest relocations in NoVa this year have all been signed in offices
within a quarter-mile of a Metro stop.
"We're seeing tenants in general wanting to be near Metro, which doesn’t
necessarily address Metro ridership, but certainly there is an interest
in companies wanting to be proximate to Metro," Tom says. "Now the next
piece of the puzzle is once a tenant moves near Metro, are their
employees using Metro? That’s a different question."
John Schlegel John Lugar Transwestern
Transwestern
Transwestern's John Schlegel (left, with colleague John Lugar) says the
combination of frustration with Metro, alternative transportation
methods and people living closer to work has caused a dip in ridership
but doesn't change the fundamental need for companies to be near the
Metro.
"While ridership is probably down, I don’t think demand for public
transportation is going to dissipate over the long term," John says.
"You’ve got people who work downtown from all parts of the greater DC
area, providing those employees access to public transportation is a
fundamental I don’t think will ever change."
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Metro is having a bad
year. SafeTrack surges this summer forced weeks-long closures and
several headline-grabbing incidents raised public concerns about the
rail's safety. Last week's ridership report only further exacerbates
Metro's strugges: it showed an 11% ridership drop in the most recent
quarter and a 7% year-to-date drop over 2015.
Developers, Brokers Not Worried About Metro Ridership Decline
Bisnow
Despite this bad news, DC's top developers and brokers have little
concern about building and drawing tenants to Metro-centric
developments.
"I think Metro still checks a box, a very important box," Douglas
Development principal Norman Jemal, above, tells Bisnow. "In many cases
it’s a threshold issue for developers. Residents, apartment dwellers and
office tenants all gravitate to Metro...I don’t think any developers
read this ridership report and said, 'Oh, I don’t need to be near
Metro.'"
Norman remains confident in public transportation as a viable
alternative to driving in DC. He is so confident, in fact, that Douglas
Development's H Street mixed-use project will have just five parking
spots for 30 units and will instead offer a $100 SmarTrip card and a
Bikeshare membership to tenants.
Developers, Brokers Not Worried About Metro Ridership Decline
Bisnow
Stonebridge Carras principal Doug Firstenberg says he views this year's
decline as a blip and is more focused on the long term, where he
predicts Metro will be successful—in part, because it has to be.
"We’re not making any adjustments to our underwriting of TOD because of
where Metro is today," Doug tells Bisnow. "We fundamentally believe
Metro is the most important issue facing the region, therefore people
are going to commit the resources and the needs to make Metro work."
Doug says he doesn't focus on the overall ridership for the entire rail
system, rather he looks at what stations and lines have the most growth
and where certain asset classes are performing well.
"What we look at is different lines and different demographics," Doug
says. "The Green Line is a heavily residential line because it doesn’t
have as many fundamentals for office, but it's got great residential
metrics. When were looking for office sites—we may be crazy, but we
still do—the Red and Orange/Blue lines are pretty good."
Doug and Norman will both speak at Bisnow's BMAC East event on October
20.
Cushman & Wakefield Tom McHugh
Courtesy: Tom McHugh
On the brokerage side, tenant reps say the demand for space near Metro
stations has not dissipated due to falling ridership.
Cushman & Wakefield senior director Tom McHugh, above, says the top
10 largest relocations in NoVa this year have all been signed in offices
within a quarter-mile of a Metro stop.
"We're seeing tenants in general wanting to be near Metro, which doesn’t
necessarily address Metro ridership, but certainly there is an interest
in companies wanting to be proximate to Metro," Tom says. "Now the next
piece of the puzzle is once a tenant moves near Metro, are their
employees using Metro? That’s a different question."
John Schlegel John Lugar Transwestern
Transwestern
Transwestern's John Schlegel (left, with colleague John Lugar) says the
combination of frustration with Metro, alternative transportation
methods and people living closer to work has caused a dip in ridership
but doesn't change the fundamental need for companies to be near the
Metro.
"While ridership is probably down, I don’t think demand for public
transportation is going to dissipate over the long term," John says.
"You’ve got people who work downtown from all parts of the greater DC
area, providing those employees access to public transportation is a
fundamental I don’t think will ever change."
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Metro is having a bad
year. SafeTrack surges this summer forced weeks-long closures and
several headline-grabbing incidents raised public concerns about the
rail's safety. Last week's ridership report only further exacerbates
Metro's strugges: it showed an 11% ridership drop in the most recent
quarter and a 7% year-to-date drop over 2015.
Developers, Brokers Not Worried About Metro Ridership Decline
Bisnow
Despite this bad news, DC's top developers and brokers have little
concern about building and drawing tenants to Metro-centric
developments.
"I think Metro still checks a box, a very important box," Douglas
Development principal Norman Jemal, above, tells Bisnow. "In many cases
it’s a threshold issue for developers. Residents, apartment dwellers and
office tenants all gravitate to Metro...I don’t think any developers
read this ridership report and said, 'Oh, I don’t need to be near
Metro.'"
Norman remains confident in public transportation as a viable
alternative to driving in DC. He is so confident, in fact, that Douglas
Development's H Street mixed-use project will have just five parking
spots for 30 units and will instead offer a $100 SmarTrip card and a
Bikeshare membership to tenants.
Developers, Brokers Not Worried About Metro Ridership Decline
Bisnow
Stonebridge Carras principal Doug Firstenberg says he views this year's
decline as a blip and is more focused on the long term, where he
predicts Metro will be successful—in part, because it has to be.
"We’re not making any adjustments to our underwriting of TOD because of
where Metro is today," Doug tells Bisnow. "We fundamentally believe
Metro is the most important issue facing the region, therefore people
are going to commit the resources and the needs to make Metro work."
Doug says he doesn't focus on the overall ridership for the entire rail
system, rather he looks at what stations and lines have the most growth
and where certain asset classes are performing well.
"What we look at is different lines and different demographics," Doug
says. "The Green Line is a heavily residential line because it doesn’t
have as many fundamentals for office, but it's got great residential
metrics. When were looking for office sites—we may be crazy, but we
still do—the Red and Orange/Blue lines are pretty good."
Doug and Norman will both speak at Bisnow's BMAC East event on October
20.
Cushman & Wakefield Tom McHugh
Courtesy: Tom McHugh
On the brokerage side, tenant reps say the demand for space near Metro
stations has not dissipated due to falling ridership.
Cushman & Wakefield senior director Tom McHugh, above, says the top
10 largest relocations in NoVa this year have all been signed in offices
within a quarter-mile of a Metro stop.
"We're seeing tenants in general wanting to be near Metro, which doesn’t
necessarily address Metro ridership, but certainly there is an interest
in companies wanting to be proximate to Metro," Tom says. "Now the next
piece of the puzzle is once a tenant moves near Metro, are their
employees using Metro? That’s a different question."
John Schlegel John Lugar Transwestern
Transwestern
Transwestern's John Schlegel (left, with colleague John Lugar) says the
combination of frustration with Metro, alternative transportation
methods and people living closer to work has caused a dip in ridership
but doesn't change the fundamental need for companies to be near the
Metro.
"While ridership is probably down, I don’t think demand for public
transportation is going to dissipate over the long term," John says.
"You’ve got people who work downtown from all parts of the greater DC
area, providing those employees access to public transportation is a
fundamental I don’t think will ever change."
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Metro is having a bad
year. SafeTrack surges this summer forced weeks-long closures and
several headline-grabbing incidents raised public concerns about the
rail's safety. Last week's ridership report only further exacerbates
Metro's strugges: it showed an 11% ridership drop in the most recent
quarter and a 7% year-to-date drop over 2015.
Developers, Brokers Not Worried About Metro Ridership Decline
Bisnow
Despite this bad news, DC's top developers and brokers have little
concern about building and drawing tenants to Metro-centric
developments.
"I think Metro still checks a box, a very important box," Douglas
Development principal Norman Jemal, above, tells Bisnow. "In many cases
it’s a threshold issue for developers. Residents, apartment dwellers and
office tenants all gravitate to Metro...I don’t think any developers
read this ridership report and said, 'Oh, I don’t need to be near
Metro.'"
Norman remains confident in public transportation as a viable
alternative to driving in DC. He is so confident, in fact, that Douglas
Development's H Street mixed-use project will have just five parking
spots for 30 units and will instead offer a $100 SmarTrip card and a
Bikeshare membership to tenants.
Developers, Brokers Not Worried About Metro Ridership Decline
Bisnow
Stonebridge Carras principal Doug Firstenberg says he views this year's
decline as a blip and is more focused on the long term, where he
predicts Metro will be successful—in part, because it has to be.
"We’re not making any adjustments to our underwriting of TOD because of
where Metro is today," Doug tells Bisnow. "We fundamentally believe
Metro is the most important issue facing the region, therefore people
are going to commit the resources and the needs to make Metro work."
Doug says he doesn't focus on the overall ridership for the entire rail
system, rather he looks at what stations and lines have the most growth
and where certain asset classes are performing well.
"What we look at is different lines and different demographics," Doug
says. "The Green Line is a heavily residential line because it doesn’t
have as many fundamentals for office, but it's got great residential
metrics. When were looking for office sites—we may be crazy, but we
still do—the Red and Orange/Blue lines are pretty good."
Doug and Norman will both speak at Bisnow's BMAC East event on October
20.
Cushman & Wakefield Tom McHugh
Courtesy: Tom McHugh
On the brokerage side, tenant reps say the demand for space near Metro
stations has not dissipated due to falling ridership.
Cushman & Wakefield senior director Tom McHugh, above, says the top
10 largest relocations in NoVa this year have all been signed in offices
within a quarter-mile of a Metro stop.
"We're seeing tenants in general wanting to be near Metro, which doesn’t
necessarily address Metro ridership, but certainly there is an interest
in companies wanting to be proximate to Metro," Tom says. "Now the next
piece of the puzzle is once a tenant moves near Metro, are their
employees using Metro? That’s a different question."
John Schlegel John Lugar Transwestern
Transwestern
Transwestern's John Schlegel (left, with colleague John Lugar) says the
combination of frustration with Metro, alternative transportation
methods and people living closer to work has caused a dip in ridership
but doesn't change the fundamental need for companies to be near the
Metro.
"While ridership is probably down, I don’t think demand for public
transportation is going to dissipate over the long term," John says.
"You’ve got people who work downtown from all parts of the greater DC
area, providing those employees access to public transportation is a
fundamental I don’t think will ever change."
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Metro is having a bad
year. SafeTrack surges this summer forced weeks-long closures and
several headline-grabbing incidents raised public concerns about the
rail's safety. Last week's ridership report only further exacerbates
Metro's strugges: it showed an 11% ridership drop in the most recent
quarter and a 7% year-to-date drop over 2015.
Developers, Brokers Not Worried About Metro Ridership Decline
Bisnow
Despite this bad news, DC's top developers and brokers have little
concern about building and drawing tenants to Metro-centric
developments.
"I think Metro still checks a box, a very important box," Douglas
Development principal Norman Jemal, above, tells Bisnow. "In many cases
it’s a threshold issue for developers. Residents, apartment dwellers and
office tenants all gravitate to Metro...I don’t think any developers
read this ridership report and said, 'Oh, I don’t need to be near
Metro.'"
Norman remains confident in public transportation as a viable
alternative to driving in DC. He is so confident, in fact, that Douglas
Development's H Street mixed-use project will have just five parking
spots for 30 units and will instead offer a $100 SmarTrip card and a
Bikeshare membership to tenants.
Developers, Brokers Not Worried About Metro Ridership Decline
Bisnow
Stonebridge Carras principal Doug Firstenberg says he views this year's
decline as a blip and is more focused on the long term, where he
predicts Metro will be successful—in part, because it has to be.
"We’re not making any adjustments to our underwriting of TOD because of
where Metro is today," Doug tells Bisnow. "We fundamentally believe
Metro is the most important issue facing the region, therefore people
are going to commit the resources and the needs to make Metro work."
Doug says he doesn't focus on the overall ridership for the entire rail
system, rather he looks at what stations and lines have the most growth
and where certain asset classes are performing well.
"What we look at is different lines and different demographics," Doug
says. "The Green Line is a heavily residential line because it doesn’t
have as many fundamentals for office, but it's got great residential
metrics. When were looking for office sites—we may be crazy, but we
still do—the Red and Orange/Blue lines are pretty good."
Doug and Norman will both speak at Bisnow's BMAC East event on October
20.
Cushman & Wakefield Tom McHugh
Courtesy: Tom McHugh
On the brokerage side, tenant reps say the demand for space near Metro
stations has not dissipated due to falling ridership.
Cushman & Wakefield senior director Tom McHugh, above, says the top
10 largest relocations in NoVa this year have all been signed in offices
within a quarter-mile of a Metro stop.
"We're seeing tenants in general wanting to be near Metro, which doesn’t
necessarily address Metro ridership, but certainly there is an interest
in companies wanting to be proximate to Metro," Tom says. "Now the next
piece of the puzzle is once a tenant moves near Metro, are their
employees using Metro? That’s a different question."
John Schlegel John Lugar Transwestern
Transwestern
Transwestern's John Schlegel (left, with colleague John Lugar) says the
combination of frustration with Metro, alternative transportation
methods and people living closer to work has caused a dip in ridership
but doesn't change the fundamental need for companies to be near the
Metro.
"While ridership is probably down, I don’t think demand for public
transportation is going to dissipate over the long term," John says.
"You’ve got people who work downtown from all parts of the greater DC
area, providing those employees access to public transportation is a
fundamental I don’t think will ever change."
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
Read more at: https://www.bisnow.com/washington-dc/news/commercial-real-estate/how-metros-ridership-decline-affects-dcs-real-estate-industry-65083?utm_source=CopyShare&utm_medium=Browser
No comments:
Post a Comment