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Market Overview
Virginia Business
June 2005
Focus:
Northern Virginia
Federal spending continues to power the commercial real
estate market in Northern Virginia. "Everything
is on fire right now," broker Mark Larsen, president
of Larsen Commercial Real Estate Services in Reston,
told colleagues during a recent statewide real estate
conference. From condos to office and retail, space
is being leased or bought, fueled by employers making
new hires. The result: Vacancy rates have dropped from
20 percent to 13 percent in the past three years.
The demand for space comes as the
region grows faster than any metropolitan area outside
the Sunbelt. Since the September 2001 terrorist attacks,
increased government spending — the figure was
$100 billion in Northern Virginia in 2003 — has
prompted companies to add jobs, attracting new residents
and businesses. Government contractor Booz Allen Hamilton
of McLean, for instance, plans to add 4,600 employees
by 2010.
Recent census figures show a 41 percent
jump in Loudoun County's population in four years. The
population growth and planned 23-mile extension of the
Metrorail through Tysons Corner to Dulles Washington
International Airport bode well for commercial real
estate. Meanwhile, housing prices have become astronomical.
"In Reston, people are paying $1.4 million for
a two-to-three bedroom condo," says Larsen. |