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Inner suburbs
play their hole card
Terrorism
war, ample public transit, urban amenities make them competitive
again
by
David Hubler
Like
countless inner ring suburbs throughout the U.S., Arlington
and Alexandria face unrelenting pressures from those
farther from their core city. Insatiable demand for
new office and residential space feeds suburban sprawl
that keeps growth charging away from mature, well-developed
suburbs to those outer areas.
Yet,
Alexandria and Arlington have a unique ace in the hole.
Thanks to their proximity to the nations capital,
they are denizens of defense and other federal entities.
The trend has been going on since 1941, when the foundation
was laid for the 6.5 million-square-foot Pentagon building
in Arlington. After continuing for most of the Cold
War, federal spending slowed during budget cuts of the
1990s, while a booming high technology industry
fueled by the locally created Internet and the emerging
telecommunications giants made more distant locales
in Northern Virginia, such as Fairfax, Loudoun and Prince
Williams counties, sexier markets for commercial real
estate.
Today,
however, the situation has reversed. The bust in high
technology has left for lease signs throughout
faster-growing areas of Northern Virginia. Trammell
Crow, a commercial real estate developer based in Tysons
Corner, puts the vacancy rate in Fairfax County at 12
percent for the third quarter of 2002, and 15.5 percent
in Loudoun County. At the same time, vacancies in Arlington
were a low 7.5 percent and in Alexandria 8.6 percent.
Once
again, the hot spots seem to be Arlington and Alexandria
because of a big tranche of federal spending, estimated
at $31 billion, this time going to the war on terrorism.
The new spending binge is pushing exotic applications
such as satellite communications, pinpoint weaponry
guidance systems and battlefield management software,
many of whose makers have facilities or headquarters
close to Washington.
Moreover,
Arlington and Alexandria are enjoying an unexpected
boost since a referendum to raise the sales tax locally
and build more highways and public transit in Northern
Virginia failed in November. The levys victory
would have been more beneficial for outlying areas reliant
upon automobiles, but with their efficient public transit
systems already in place, Arlington and Alexandria are
looking even better. In fact, a new problem could be
a lack of office space instead of too many vacancies.
The
biggest single event that bodes well for these two inner
suburbs is the creation of the Department of Homeland
Security, which, in the biggest federal reorganization
in 50 years, merges two dozen law enforcement and security
agencies and over 170,000 federal employees.
While
the precise location of the new department headquarters
has not been determined, commercial developers such
as Trammell Crow Managing Director Henry Chapman believe
Arlington has an edge. Traditionally, there has
been very little government contracting in Alexandria,
he says.
Even
if the headquarters is located in the district, Chapman
believes Arlington will benefit from spillover leasing.
Arlington contains more government contract-driven
offices than any other jurisdiction in Virginia,
he says. Theres a very good chance the departments
new Transportation Safety Administration will end up
in Arlington.
In
fact, the agency and the burgeoning Defense Department
are both seeking up to 500,000 square feet of office
space close to the Pentagon, in an area that encompasses
Crystal City, Pentagon City and the Rosslyn section
of Arlington. At the moment, there are only a few sites
in Arlington that could rapidly accommodate a large-scale
influx of federal workers. One is the complex owned
by now-bankrupt telecom giant WorldCom, which went on
the auction block in December in Pentagon City, and
a 540,000-square-foot building in Crystal City that
now houses some Defense Department offices that were
relocated there following the Sept. 11 terrorist attack
on the Pentagon.
The
State Department is currently moving an estimated 1,500
to 1,700 staffers into a new facility at 1801 Lynn St.
in Rosslyn, taking all 350,000 square feet in what is
one of the largest buildings in Arlington. For security
reasons, officials decline to identify the division
being phased in, but full occupancy is expected by mid-year.
A
little to the south in Alexandria, the U.S. Patent &
Trademark Offices mammoth headquarters is under
construction. Late this year or early in 2004, the office
will move from its cramped Crystal City quarters in
Arlington to a 2.5-million-square-foot complex that
will house some 7,000 employees. Its the largest
lease ever negotiated by the General Services Administration
and will grow the citys overall work force of
nearly 90,000 by about 8 percent.
Suddenly
becoming the belle of the ball again is good news for
local officials. As demand catches up with existing
supply, says Alexandria Mayor Kerry Donley, the
jurisdictions that have positive characteristics like
good locations and access to multiple modes of transportation
... will put us in a better competitive position than
office projects that are further out in the region.
Besides
providing office space for expanding federal agencies,
Arlington and Alexandria are finding defense-related
companies knocking on their doors. About 800 information
technology firms are based in Alexandria, a city of
130,000, and some of them are growing because of their
defense orientation, notes Mark Jinks, Alexandrias
assistant city manager for fiscal and financial affairs.
As defense and national security needs have shifted
and grown, firms are changing their products or direction,
focusing more on federal contracting. Jinks believes
a good deal of that projected growth will find its way
to Alexandria. Our real estate tax is lower than
Fairfax County, a little bit higher than Arlington and
lower than the D.C.-Maryland side of the river, so were
very tax-competitive, he says.
Not
all the attraction, however, is from federal bucks.
Since both cities developed earlier than exterior locales,
they have better developed infrastructures. That translates
into more amenities such as retail shops, restaurants,
and access to arts and entertainment. Alexandrias
Old Towne had been offering up eateries and shopping
even before George Washington presided over a meeting
there in 1774 to select delegates to the first Virginia
Convention. And the World War I torpedo factory at the
foot of King Street that is now a center for working
artists and craftspeople has become a waterfront focal
point for tourists and residents alike.
Arlington
recently won the national Overall Excellence in
Smart Growth award from the U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency for its Rosslyn-Ballston Metro corridor.
The EPA praised its 21 million square feet of office,
retail and commercial space, 3,000-plus hotel rooms,
and 22,500 residential units for creating vibrant
urban villages while minimizing automobile pollution
and poor land use from cookie-cutter subdivisions.
Arlington
County Board member Jay Fisette says that while the
region deals with urban sprawl and traffic congestion,
businesses are increasingly concerned with quality of
life issues. Theyre looking at the inner
suburban areas where they can access transit, where
they can walk, where theres a very well established
quality of life and cultural amenities. And Arlington
sort of epitomizes that.
If
Arlington and Alexandria have any big problem, it might
be too much of a good thing. Both jurisdictions are
well developed and have vacancy rates in the single
digits. With leases running at $30 to $35 a square foot
in Arlington and about $28.50 in Alexandria, compared
to $15 to $25 a square foot along the Dulles Corridor
in Fairfax County, would-be corporate residents may
be forced to look further afield.
Fairfax
County, for example, reported a 61 percent increase
in available office space in just the six months prior
to July 2002. The countys 10 million square feet
is the most space its had on the market since
1992.
And,
not every defense contractor or systems integrator is
likely to quit its digs on Interstate 66 or the Dulles
Toll Road just to move 10 to 15 miles closer to the
nations capital. One reason is the larger federal
defense contractors like Science Applications International
Corp. (SAIC) have satellite offices around the Beltway
as well as long-standing working relationships with
Uncle Sam. Arnold Punaro, the senior VP and director
of federal business development, says SAIC has ongoing
contracts with almost all of the agencies that will
come under the new departments umbrella, including
Customs, the Coast Guard and the Immigration and Naturalization
Service. We do a lot of work in the chemical/biological/radiological
area and we do a lot of R&D in the weapons of mass
destruction area, he adds, so we have a
sizeable amount of business with the elements that will
constitute the new department. Punaro says SAIC
will stay as close to those customers as possible.
In
addition, the empty office space in the outer suburbs
is driving down lease rates. This means many tech firms
in Reston, Herndon and Dulles are likely to stay there,
says Rick Hanna, chief executive officer of Ai Metrix,
a network management software company in Herndon. You
drive along I-66 or the toll road and you can see their
buildings everywhere out there whether its
DynCorp or SAIC or AMS or Northrop Grumman theyve
got so much real estate there, says Hanna, whose
clients include telecommunications companies and the
Department of Defense.
Cheaper
leases in Herndon are what attracted Hanna in the first
place, and hes not prepared to move closer without
substantial benefits. I got a very good deal on
our space and as I go to renew my lease in mid year,
the way it looks right now, Ill probably be able
to get a better deal, he says, adding that it
would take a much better deal to move. From my
point of view, Ill probably wind up staying in
this immediate area because I have a lot of people commuting
in from Ashburn and Leesburg.
In
Northern Virginia, no word is more fraught with pain
and loathing than commuting. Gov. Mark Warners
failure on Election Day to convince Northern Virginia
voters, especially those in Arlington and Fairfax counties,
to pass a half-penny sales tax hike earmarked solely
for area transportation projects, has meant the cancellation
of one third of the states road projects, many
of them aimed at easing commuting precisely in those
locales. The tax hike defeat, coupled with the states
huge budget deficit, leaves little hope of suburban
traffic relief anytime soon.
Even
the areas mass transit plan, which originally
spoke of extending Metro bus and rail service through
the technology-heavy center at Tysons Corner to Dulles
International Airport by 2010, has been scaled back,
with no completion date envisioned. In fact, in its
latest incarnation, released by the Metro Board in November,
the 11-stop, 24-mile extension from West Falls Church
to Loudoun County and the airport is not even a top
priority in the overall $12.2 billion plan, of which
the local jurisdictions can actually account for only
$2 billion. In an interview with Virginia Business editors
on Nov. 26, Warner said that had the referendum passed,
mass transit would have gotten funding that otherwise
would require 70 years of routine, annual state budget
allocations.
Since
more money isnt forthcoming, the first priority
is the stuff weve got to do just to
keep the current transit system running, including fixing
escalators, refurbishing rail cars and replacing older
buses, says Chris Zimmerman, the board chairman of both
Metro and Arlington County. Also in doubt now is a light
rail plan for Columbia Pike, a 3.5-mile road that is
one of Arlingtons major arteries and business
centers. The referendum, had it passed, would have gone
a long way to funding the initiative. We probably
couldve done something just for the money that
was in the referendum or slightly more, says Zimmerman,
whose jurisdiction includes the Columbia Pike corridor.
The Dulles rail extension, on the other hand, needed
both passage of the referendum and millions in federal
money just to get off the drawing board.
Even
so, Alexandria and Arlington are already well served
by Metro, and the impacts on them by the referendum's
failure should be significantly less than those on outer
suburbs. Federal patent workers, for example, will have
two Alexandria stations to ease their commute. And Zimmerman
says plans for Arlingtons overcrowded Orange Line
include adding new entrances to existing stations and
the introduction of eight-car trains to replace the
standard six-car configuration.
Ease
of commuting, along with other amenities, makes it hard
for companies already in Arlington and Alexandria to
convince their workers to leave. After E-Trade Group
Inc. bought Arlington-based Telebanc Financial Inc.
in January 2000 and was going to move the online financial
service to the Dulles Corridor, it changed plans when
employees balked. Folks said, We dont
want to leave Arlington, Zimmerman says.
So E-Trades new headquarters is now in Arlingtons
bustling Ballston section.
But
as Zimmerman sees it, its the federal government
that represents a major sector of Arlingtons economy.
It has been before and clearly will be in the
future. Its a plus in the sense that at a time
of recession, when a lot of high-tech businesses were
not able to expand as they had hoped to, the slack has
been picked up by government leasing. It seems
likely then that Arlington and Alexandrias lucky
proximity to the nations capital will once again
make these jurisdictions beneficiaries of federal bucks.
Return
to Virginia Business - January 2003
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