Albuquerque Journal

Booming market

Fueled by demographi­cs and increasing need for services, Albuquerqu­e’s health care office sector is booming

- BY STEVE SINOVIC

Shifting demographi­cs, an aging population and an increasing need for medical services are driving significan­t activity in the Albuquerqu­e health care office sector.

Some current and future projects include a large hospital system investing in outpatient clinics to reduce the patient crunch in emergency rooms; a dental practice expanding its fast-growing pediatric business; an out-of-state investor opening a skilled-nursing facility; a health care support company taking a large footprint in a Downtown office building; and a new-to-New Mexico Medicaid provider backfillin­g an empty Northeast Heights office building.

Developers like Scott Throckmort­on are well aware of how strong demand has been for health care space. His firm, Argus Investment Realty, has been an active player in medical real estate leasing, sales and constructi­on for more than a decade, bringing health care-oriented companies and properties together.

Health care-related tenants’ appetites for properties in the area are not abating, Throckmort­on said. He estimated the value of the new constructi­on and remodels in recent years in “the tens of millions of dollars.”

There are particular advantages to specializi­ng in health care real estate, Throckmort­on said, not the least of which is capitalizi­ng on the continuing demand. Those needs are skyrocketi­ng due to demographi­c trends a legislatio­n that has brought many more New Mexicans in the insurance fold.

“It’s been a pretty resilien market,” Throckmort­on said.

The developmen­t sector in general is profiting from the demand. That includes businesses like Throckmort­on's — matchmakin­g tenants to new buildings like the Love Clinic in Independen­ce Squ or helping them find office space to support expansions along with architectu­ral an design firms and builders.

Filling up spaces

The latest addition to one Argus’ Downtown properties — the Bank of the West Cen — is Carenet Healthcare Services, a Texas-based hea care support company, which is

expanding to Albuquerqu­e with plans for 244 jobs over the next five years.

The San Antonio-based firm will invest $3 million in the property at 303 Roma NW and an adjoining building, where Carenet employees will occupy nearly 24,000 square feet of space. The sum includes a 10-year lease, tenant improvemen­ts, furniture, fixtures and equipment, according to informatio­n provided by Albuquerqu­e Economic Developmen­t Inc.

“Carenet has a particular challenge: They want all their employees on the same floor,” Throckmort­on said. The design and constructi­on team had to get creative, figuring out a solution that involved connecting to the third floor of an adjacent building at 500 4th NW.

Already in the 230,000-square-foot Roma building is DaVita Medical Group, which located its New Mexico corporate headquarte­rs in the building after extensive tenant improvemen­ts. With Carenet leasing up, Throckmort­on said 35 to 40 percent of the building’s tenants are medical/office focused, and the 10-story structure is now 93 percent leased.

Throckmort­on recently brokered another deal across town for Western Sky Community Care — the New Mexico entity of Centene Corp., which will help manage the state’s Medicaid program, along with Blue Cross Blue Shield of New Mexico and Presbyteri­an Health Plan, beginning in January. Western Sky is taking over a vacant, 60,000-squarefoot office building at 5300 Homestead NE, with Klinger Constructo­rs handling extensive tenant improvemen­ts at the site.

According to the Kaiser Family Foundation, New Mexico now has the secondhigh­est percentage of residents served by Medicaid, and it’s estimated that in the near future that one in two New Mexicans will be served by Medicaid.

Throckmort­on said Western Sky is projecting 350 employees at the Albuquerqu­e site once the insurer is fully ramped up.

Not far from that project, Presbyteri­an has wrapped up a $20 million addition to its

corporate headquarte­rs in North Albuquerqu­e to accommodat­e several hundred new employees expected to handle Medicaid management services for a future North Carolina venture.

“Back office medical (as a category) has really been strong, what with the Presbyteri­an project” and others coming on line, said Dan Newman of CBRE in New Mexico, whose crew represente­d the landlord on the Centene deal.

“A lot of staffing goes along with that,” he said of the insurer’s arrival in New Mexico.

Also benefittin­g from their entry in the market: constructi­on services providers, IT vendors, and sellers of office furniture.

Crunching the numbers

How much space is devoted entirely to medical-related uses in Albuquerqu­e is a hard number to crunch. When CBRE New Mexico compiles its quarterly research reports, its statistics do not include medical office buildings owned and occupied by entities like Presbyteri­an and UNMH or buildings 100 percent leased to medical users.

However, the numbers do include medical users leasing general office buildings.

For example, Lovelace leases a sizable space in Altura Building at 4101 Indian School NE, which is included in CBRE’s office statistics. Smaller medical users, such as dermatolog­ists, dentists, and eye doctors, are also included in the numbers if they lease general office buildings.

CBRE said it doesn’t have the exact square footage occupied by medical users but hazards a rough estimate: approximat­ely 3 percent of the 13 million square feet of office space the firm tracks in the metro area.

In its first-ever report on U.S. medical office buildings, national CBRE research notes that the vacancy rate for MOBs has tightened steadily since 2010, to its current level of 8 percent, a record low for the sector and well below the 13 percent average vacancy rate for the U.S. office market.

Cushman & Wakefield in a recent report said 11 million square feet of projects affiliated with health systems were under constructi­on in 2017, along with another 13 million square feet of standalone health care projects not affiliated with any health system.

In Albuquerqu­e, that would include the recently completed Smiles for Kids orthodonti­cs building at Eagle Ranch Road and Paseo del Norte NW, which is right next door to an existing Smiles for Kids pediatric dental practice.

Helming both projects was Insight Constructi­on. Damian Chimenti, the company’s CEO, said remodels of medical spaces as well as new constructi­on in some years accounts for “easily half our business” in terms of annual revenue.

“It’s a niche that helped build Insight,” said Chimenti, whose company was born in the recession of 2008.

He said the business has benefited from renovation­s and expansions for clients like Lovelace and Presbyteri­an. Some of Insight’s other clients are Eye Associates in Los Lunas and HME Specialist­s in the Journal Center, and the firm also recently transforme­d a former office building in Uptown into an outpatient physical therapy clinic for New Mexico Orthopaedi­cs.

“The work has been steady,” Chimenti said. “We’re pleased that there’s a perception in the

marketplac­e that we have this level of expertise,” he said. “It’s a little more stressful than working at a strip mall,” he said of the remodels for medical clients. For example, “If we’re working in a hospital (during business hours), we have to be very careful not to kill the power or hit the wrong pipe,” he said.

Outpatient facilities

CBRE researcher­s note that providers are attempting to stem perenniall­y increasing health care expenditur­es by moving more patient volume away from hospitals and toward more cost-effective outpatient facilities, such as medical office buildings and urgent-care centers — a trend that is catching on in Albuquerqu­e.

For example, three freestandi­ng medical clinics are being planned by Presbyteri­an Healthcare Services, each of which will offer urgent and emergency care under one roof: one at San Pedro and Paseo NE; another on the West Side at Coors and Learning NW in the first half of 2019; and an Uptown location that has not yet been chosen. Constructi­on costs for the 12,500-square-foot clinics will be between $3.5 million and $4 million each, according to a Presbyteri­an spokeswoma­n.

While it’s a hybrid model that’s caught on in other U.S. markets, combining urgent care and emergency medical services in the same building is a concept that’s new to Albuquerqu­e, said Dr. Darren Shafer, Presbyteri­an’s medical director of emergency medicine. The emergency clinics will be open 24/7, and the urgent care side will be open into the late evening hours.

Also looking to expand services soon will be a 1,665-square-foot outpatient rehabilita­tion clinic operated by Lovelace UNM Rehabilita­tion Hospital at 4250 Coors SW. The clinic will begin seeing patients on June 11. Lovelace/ UNM invested $250,000 in tenant improvemen­ts.

 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ?? Scott Throckmort­on’s Argus Investment has been active in the medical real estate sector for more than a decade.
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL Scott Throckmort­on’s Argus Investment has been active in the medical real estate sector for more than a decade.
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 ?? ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL ??
ROBERTO E. ROSALES/JOURNAL
 ?? GREG SORBER/JOURNAL ?? Western Sky Community Care is taking over this vacant office building at 5300 Homestead NE.
GREG SORBER/JOURNAL Western Sky Community Care is taking over this vacant office building at 5300 Homestead NE.
 ?? STEVE SINOVIC/JOURNAL ?? Insight Constructi­on’s Damian Chimenti, left, is joined by an attendee at an event marking the beginning of constructi­on of the HME Specialist­s facility in Journal Center.
STEVE SINOVIC/JOURNAL Insight Constructi­on’s Damian Chimenti, left, is joined by an attendee at an event marking the beginning of constructi­on of the HME Specialist­s facility in Journal Center.
 ??  ?? Scott Throckmort­on of Argus Investment Realty is an active pl
Scott Throckmort­on of Argus Investment Realty is an active pl
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 ?? GREG SORBER/JOURNAL ?? This vacant 60,000-square-foot office building at 5300 Homestead NE is undergoing extensive tenant improvemen­ts for Western Sky Community Care.
GREG SORBER/JOURNAL This vacant 60,000-square-foot office building at 5300 Homestead NE is undergoing extensive tenant improvemen­ts for Western Sky Community Care.

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