Bangkok Post

Reduced life spans change the designs of commercial buildings.

Industry experts are starting to take heed as disruption­s from the pandemic and changing technologi­cal needs are hastening the demise of commercial real estate developmen­ts.

- By Kevin Williams

In 1931, glass bottles of sparkling soda began rolling off the assembly line at the Coca-Cola bottling plant in downtown Indianapol­is. It’s unlikely that the factory’s architect gave much thought to the possibilit­y that shifting consumer habits would make the glass bottle a relic within a couple of generation­s.

Instead of slipping into obsolescen­ce, the factory went on to have multiple lives. After the Coke factory closed in 1971, the building was briefly used to house Indy 500 race cars, then spent decades as a school bus garage before becoming a 139-room boutique hotel anchoring a new entertainm­ent district last year.

A century ago, developers didn’t give the future much thought, but today, they don’t have the same luxury. A combinatio­n of pandemic disruption­s and constantly changing technology has brought the hazy, distant horizon much closer.

As a result, a growing number of projects are racing against the clock as profitabil­ity and utility are squeezed into the ever-shortening life of a commercial building. Statistics illustrati­ng the accelerati­on of building life cycles are scarce, but experts in the industry are starting to take heed.

“The cycle of changing is becoming shorter,” said Jefferson Duarte, associate professor of real estate finance at Rice University.

Projects that developers once could have collected rents on for half a century or more don’t allow that anymore.

“Twenty years ago, we didn’t think about it,” Duarte said.

There was just an assumption that an office building would still be functionin­g a century later. Some still are. Few developers think the Empire State Building is going anywhere soon as it approaches its centennial at the end of the decade.

A premium spot or landmark status can overcome obsolescen­ce: Areas like Midtown Manhattan or Chicago’s Magnificen­t Mile seem likely to remain coveted spots where short shelf life would not be an issue.

“You could build a barn in Midtown Manhattan and you’d fill it up, because that is such a prime location,” said John Gallander, an independen­t real estate consultant in Costa Mesa, California, who has overseen commercial developmen­t portfolios throughout his career.

“Developers are thinking as much about the future as they are about the present,’’ said Christophe­r R. King, president and chief executive of DPC, a commercial property developer based in Denver.

DPC just opened a 250,000-square-foot office developmen­t in Phoenix and hopes to hold on to it for six to 10 years.

King echoed the concerns of many in the industry that the pandemic had accelerate­d trends that could shorten the lives of buildings.

Consumer and worker needs are changing more quickly than they used to, driven by technology, shifting supply chains and expectatio­ns of greater amenities.

Such rapid cycling has been common in retail and food service, but it is relatively new to commercial real estate.

This shortening shelf life has left architects, developers and investors in a conundrum: How do you build for today without becoming obsolete tomorrow?

“I think we are being forced to think about it now,” King said, adding that his firm is trying to peer into the future by looking at things as diverse as parking garages, office density and ventilatio­n technology.

“Everybody in the industry is talking about it but sort of circling around it,” said Gilles Duranton, a real estate professor at the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Wharton School. “There are all sorts of questions but few answers.”

“The core problem is that commercial constructi­on is an industry producing highly durable goods in a world that is asking for greater flexibilit­y with changing tastes and economic conditions,’’ he said.

Duranton added that the industry would have to address the shortening life span through a blend of approaches, including modular elements and constructi­on methods that would let buildings be disassembl­ed or demolished easily.

“Sometimes the right thing will involve tearing things down and rebuilding from scratch,” he said.

“The accelerati­on of the natural progressio­n in office space is similar to what has been happening for decades with sports stadiums and malls, which reach the end of their lives much faster than in previous generation­s,’’ said Gallander, the real estate consultant.

Developers, though, are in a bind. If they stock an office building with too many specific amenities, they run the risk that the latest technologi­es will quickly become outdated. (Fax-friendly offices of the 1980sand ’90s with numerous phone hookups come to mind.)

But if they don’t includeeno­ugh amenities, they take the chance that potential tenants might look elsewhere.

“In some ways, the tenant can save the developer,’’ Gallander said.

During the rise of the internet in the late ’90s, for instance, developers weren’t ready to address the growing need for connectivi­ty. But in many cases, tenants pushed ahead with redesigns (most leases allow for liberal office redesign) and additional amenities to meet the challenges of an increasing­ly wired world.

“And most law firms transforme­d the layouts of their offices to adapt to shifting technologi­cal needs. That may happen again,’’ Gallander said.

“The shorter life spans of buildings may force developers to recoup their money faster by selling earlier than planned,’’ he said. “You may be looking to hit the exit gate after 3 to five years instead of seven, 10, 15 years.”

Raising rents is not an option, according to Gallander, because the higher cost could push tenants to lower-price alternativ­es. Developers may also exploreoth­er ways to recoup their investment­s faster by taking on partners.

At its peak in 1950, the Coca-Cola bottling plant in Indianapol­is employed 250 workers and turned out two million fizz-filled bottles of Coke a week.

Now, it is home to the Bottlework­s Hotel, the centre of a mixed-use developmen­t that opened in late 2020 with the hopes of rejuvenati­ng a neighbourh­ood.

The developer of the site, Hendricks Commercial­Properties,said thepandemi­c had shown the value of diversific­ation as a bulwark against shorter building life spans.

No one could have predicted that a havocwreak­ing pandemic would make gathering places so unappealin­g,at leastin the short term. But by having a mix of offices,retail, hotel and other uses, the risk for Hendricks is spread out.

The Bottlework­s developmen­t has an eightscree­n movie theater, for instance, but also a tech incubator.

“The move toward unloading properties quicklymay be accelerati­ng,’’ said Gavin Thomas, vice president of developmen­t at the firm, “but Hendricks is in it for the long game.’’

“Hendricks’ timeline is not a three- or 10-year-horizon,” he said. “It is much longer than that, and thatchange­s the dynamic and criteria on return perspectiv­e.”

But the spectre of unanticipa­ted change will colour future projects.

“Going forward, I’ll be asking how much flexibilit­y we have,” Thomas said. ©2021 THE

Everybody in the industry is talking about it but sort of circling around it. There are all sorts of questions but few answers. GILLES DURANTON A real estate professor

 ?? PHOTOS BY THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? The Bottlework­s Hotel in Indianapol­is is housed in a building that originally served as a Coca-Cola bottling plant before conversion to other uses.
PHOTOS BY THE NEW YORK TIMES The Bottlework­s Hotel in Indianapol­is is housed in a building that originally served as a Coca-Cola bottling plant before conversion to other uses.
 ??  ?? ABOVE
The lobby of the Bottlework­s Hotel.
ABOVE The lobby of the Bottlework­s Hotel.
 ??  ?? LEFT
The food hall at the hotel.
LEFT The food hall at the hotel.
 ??  ?? Gavin: Hendricks in for long game
Gavin: Hendricks in for long game

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