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Robust demand strains industrial space supply

Industrial Facilities

Robust demand strains industrial space supply

JLL’s latest report finds a shift toward much larger buildings nearer urban centers, which fetch higher rents.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | April 1, 2022
Larger facilities are helping to close the supply and demand gap in this sector. Image courtesy Dermody Properties
Larger facilities are helping to close the supply and demand gap in this sector. Image courtesy Dermody Properties

From 2010 through 2021, total U.S. industrial inventory grew by 18 percent. Over that same period, demand grew by 24 percent, driven by a surge in ecommerce that was exacerbated by the coronavirus pandemic.

“These events were defining moments that shed light on the fact that there is not enough supply to meet rapidly increasing demand in the industrial market,” states JLL in its research report “The Race for Industrial Space.”

This scarcity in industrial space has led to the sector’s lowest vacancy rate on record, from Los Angeles and Salt Lake City, to Columbus, Ohio, and New Jersey.

Demand is outpacing supply for industrial facilities. Chart: JLL
For at least a decade, demand for industrial space has been outpacing supply. Chart: JLL
 

Part of the problem is the sector’s aging warehouses: nearly three-quarters of industrial inventory is 20 years old older, and more than one-quarter is 50 years or older. Owners are scrambling to adapt older, smaller, and less functionally sophisticated facilities within urban centers at a time when demand for Class A space is at its peak, with almost 70 percent of newly modernized inventory pre-leased upon delivery.

 

The industrial sector is saddled with aging inventory
The warehouse sector is saddled with aging inventory. Chart: JLL
 

Space shortages have also led to accelerating rent growth. The average asking rents per square foot rose by 37 percent between 2016 and 2021.

BIGGER BUILDINGS IN VOGUE

JLL has identified nearly 100 proposed, under-construction, or existing adaptive reuse or replacement projects across a dozen markets. Distressed malls and vacant big-box stores are among the buildings getting industrial makeovers.

In denser urban areas where land is less available and more expensive, multistory warehouses are popular. One such example is 2505 Bruckner Boulevard, a former movie theater site on 20 acres in New York City that is being converted into a two-story, 1.1-million-sf warehouse with 28- to 32-ft clear heights. JLL states that occupiers of these multistory buildings “who value proximity to customers” are willing to pay top-of-market rents.

While smaller-warehouse developments still account for 60 percent of projects under construction, JLL estimates an 87 percent year-to-year increase in the number of 1-million-sf plus projects being built. “The high cost of land and the economies of scale from building larger structures make big-box facilities an easier fit,” says JLL.

The Sun Belt leads in new industrial development. Some 26 million sf have been delivered in Dallas-Fort Worth, 47 percent of which was pre-leased. More than two-thirds of the 20 million sf in industrial deliveries in Atlanta were pre-leased. Other Sun Belt markets like Houston, Memphis, and Phoenix are also seeing high levels of warehouse deliveries in their markets.

Yet, despite this construction activity, “demand and commodity pricing show no signs of slowing down in the near term,” says JLL. Last year, total costs to build a new warehouse rose 21 percent, according to JLL’s analysis of Bureau of Labor Statistics data. This dynamic “will enable general contractors to justify passing their increased costs to investors and end users.”

More larger warehouses being built
The construction trend in the industrial sector is leaning toward much larger warehouses. Chart: JLL
 

JLL concludes that rents for industrial space will increase more than 8 percent nationally this year, “and could be accelerated by year-end.” Vacancies will remain below the 4 percent threshold, as the imbalance of supply and demand continues through at least 2023. Projects are taking longer to build because of supply-chain delays, and land prices are peaking.

JLL predicts an “increased focus” on urban logistics sites in highly dense infill markets. JLL also foresees more adaptive reuses and conversions in urban centers.

As demand for larger buildings increases, older-generation buildings will be reimagined to accommodate end users with newer-aged features like electric vehicle parking, higher clear heights, increased truck radius maneuvering, and other reconfigurations to meet distribution needs.

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