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Market overview

Virginia Business
March 2005

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Focus: Richmond
Richmond’s commercial real estate market fared well in 2004. Overall, office vacancy rates fell from more than 16 percent to the 14 percent range, and the area saw nice gains in absorption (the change in the amount of occupied space over a period of time). In the suburban office market, vacancies also fell as the result of major lease transactions, including Saxon Mortgage, which is leasing 110,000 square feet in a build-to-suit project in Innsbrook. Capital One Financial Corp. continues to be a driver in Richmond’s suburban market with the sale of Capital One’s facilities on West Broad Street to a new player in Richmond real estate: RER/New Boston. It bought the buildings for more than $15 million in a sale-leaseback deal, with Capital One leasing the space until this fall, when it will vacate the buildings. Development activity remains stagnant in Richmond with the exception of office market condos, with about 575,000 square feet of this product either under construction or in the pipeline. The only major noncondo project during 2004 was Riverside on the James, a multiuse project going up on the city’s downtown waterfront. As firms such as Troutman Saunders vacate older downtown buildings for new digs at Riverside on the James, vacancy rates for the city’s older Class B office buildings are going up. Meanwhile, Richmond continues to revitalize Broad Street near the old Sixth Street Marketplace with the city tearing down buildings to make way for a new hotel, federal courts building and performing arts center.

Return to Virginia Business - March 2005