Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Chicago-based developer increases Pittsburgh imprint Offices, modern amenities planned at former Art Institute of Pittsburgh site

- By Mark Belko

M&J Wilkow didn’t just want to “dip our toe in the water” when it decided to jump into the Pittsburgh market in 2012 with the purchase of the Waterfront retail complex in Homestead, senior vice president Marty Sweeney likes to say.

“We wanted to do a cannonball,” he said.

Five years later, the Chicago developer might be ready to make its biggest splash yet.

M&J Wilkow has teamed with Philadelph­ia-based CenterSqua­re Investment Management to convert classrooms and chalkboard­s at the former Art Institute of Pittsburgh building in Downtown into a state-of-the-art office complex with the kind of top-flight amenities seen in larger cities like San Francisco and Chicago. Mr. Sweeney said more companies are gravitatin­g to the kind of “landmark, vintage, high-quality loft office building” that M&J Wilkow envisions for the site at 420 Boulevard of the Allies — as long as they are loaded with amenities. “When you do that and you do it right, you get the best tenants in the market and you get

some of the highest rents in market,” he said.

Several months after the Art Institute moved out, M&J Wilkow is gutting the interior of the 154,000-square-foot building, which was built in the 1920s, to create open floors and expose ceilings that range from 12½ to 15 feet high.

Among the amenities planned are a rooftop deck with views of the Monongahel­a River, a first-floor tenant lounge with free Wi-Fi, a 60-person conference center, and a fitness complex in the basement and a bike lounge with more than 40 parking spaces.

In addition, a 5,000- to 6,000square-foot restaurant with an outdoor deck is planned on the first floor.

“This building is very wellsuited for that kind of new vision we’re seeing around the country. It’s a very handsome, vintage, historic-looking structure. It’s windowed on all four sides, which is really unique for a building this age. So you’ve got a lot of natural light,” Mr. Sweeney said.

Pittsburgh-based Education Management Corp., the parent company to the Art Institute, sold the nine-story building to M&J Wilkow in 2014 for $9.9

the Art Institute moved out. Thedevelop­er hopes to have million. the space ready in early

At the time, the for-profit 2018. school signed a lease to stay The company did its in the building for three homework before settling years. The Art Institute on an office conversion. It moved out in April, relocating had toyed with the idea of to the Strip District. doing condominiu­ms or

With the help of even a hotel at the location. CenterSqua­re, M&J “We really think the office Wilkow has wasted no time market in Pittsburgh is in getting started on the rehab. the strongest of those three It has not had to borrow classes of use,” Mr. any money for the conversion, Sweeney said. “Office still enabling it to hit has a lot left in the tank.” the ground running after M&J Wilkow has found a “good niche” in redevelopi­ng empty office buildings in other cities, including San Francisco, Denver and Chicago and its suburbs.

Jason Stewart, the Jones Lang LaSalle executive vice president marketing the space, said the response in Pittsburgh so far has been curiosity.

“They’re really, really interested to understand what this building is that they’ve been driving by every day on their way into town and out of town,” he said.

The experience of M&J Wilkow is part of a recent trend where out-of-town companies have been buying up some of Downtown’s top real estate and improving it. That includes Shorenstei­n Properties at One Oxford Centre, The Davis Companies at the Union Trust Building, and Highwoods Properties at PPG Place and EQT Plaza.

In the Pittsburgh region, M&J Wilkow now owns more than 3 million square feet of space. Its holdings include the former Westinghou­se building on Stanwix Street, which it bought for $81.3 million in February, and 20 Stanwix across the street.

It also owns the Plaza at the Pointe in North Fayette in conjunctio­n with Alto Fund II; Penn Center East; and 275 Technology Drive in Canonsburg.

With each investment, M&J Wilkow has grown to become one of the bigger players in the region. Pittsburgh, Mr. Sweeney said, is now the company’s largest market.

And it might not be done buying and redevelopi­ng here. “We’re looking at opportunit­ies,” he said. “We don’t own anything up north, so that could be it.”

The developer also isn’t afraid to invest in retail at a time many shopping malls and retail centers are experienci­ng trouble. “A lot of people are scared of retail. It’s in our DNA. We’re probably not smart enough to be scared of it. So we keep looking at it,” he said.

 ?? Illustrati­ons courtesy of Strada ?? Artist rendering of the exterior of the old Art Institute of Pittsburgh on the Boulevard of the Allies in Downtown.
Illustrati­ons courtesy of Strada Artist rendering of the exterior of the old Art Institute of Pittsburgh on the Boulevard of the Allies in Downtown.
 ??  ?? Rendering of the interior of the old Art Institute of Pittsburgh.
Rendering of the interior of the old Art Institute of Pittsburgh.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States