Building Oregon 2007: Feature
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 A rendering of the Willamette Marketplace in West Linn.
Image courtesy of Venture Corp.

Going condo

The office condominium comes into favor for small businesses.

By Jon Bell

It’s not been easy over the past few years for small Oregon businesses to buy their own work space.

Consider that the value of commercial land in Bend has skyrocketed — from $7 a square foot in 1996 to $22 a square foot last year — or that no one seems to be parting with their buildings on Portland’s bustling inner east side, and it’s easy to see why.

“We know several small businesses that’ve been looking for that proverbial 5,000- or 10,000-square-foot building, but you just can’t touch them down here,” says Bill Neburka, a principal with Works Partnership Architecture LLC, whose office sits in Portland’s Central Eastside Industrial District. “People can’t buy the workspace that they want to buy.”

Enter the office condominium.

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The  Yamhill Industrial Workspace Building in Portland.
Image courtesy of Works Partnership Architecture.

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The Venture Commerce Center in Hillsboro. All will offer commercial condominium space.
Image courtesy of Venture Corp.

While not entirely new to the Oregon market, office condominiums are finding a more welcome home here thanks to impossibly high land prices, demand for ownership and a paucity of small commercial properties available for purchase.

Several planned mixed-use developments in Bend will include office condominiums, and both Corvallis and Ashland have commercial condominiums for sale. Offices in downtown Portland are being converted into condo spaces, and more than a few brand-new office condo buildings are in the works for Portland and the metro-region suburbs.

“There’s definitely an increase in activity for developers starting to build commercial condos,” says Patricia Raicht, senior West Coast research manager for Grubb & Ellis. “There are a number of projects planned for office condos, which makes a lot of sense for the right business. Builders are building them and selling them.”

OTHER FORCES DRIVING THE RISE of the commercial condominium in Oregon include continued low-interest rates and the fact that the model has found success in other markets such as Phoenix, Seattle and San Francisco. As the economy has turned around, office leasing rates have increased and created new demand for all kinds of office space, including for-sale properties.

Raicht says that for companies that need to reinvest capital into their business and not in real estate, commercial condominiums aren’t the way to go. But for small, usually professional firms looking for the long-term benefits of ownership, condos have mass appeal.

“They make a whole lot of sense for small-business owners who want to create some wealth or build up some equity for an exit strategy for their business,” Raicht says. Instead of paying rent for 10 years, they’ll buy a condo, and when they’re ready to sell the business, they’ve built up equity in not only their business, but also in their real estate.”

Condominiums do cost more up front for businesses, association fees tack on extra expenses and the threat of class action lawsuits by owner associations for construction defects are often enough to scare away some developers. At the same time, condos also eliminate landlords and fluctuations in rental rates. New buildings are usually located in prime commercial areas, and often the spaces for sale are left in a fairly raw form so new owners can finish them off as they choose.

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The Mt. Bachelor Center, on the west side of Bend, designed by Pinnacle Architecture. The high land prices in Bend have made commercial condos an attractive option for businesses in the area.
Images courtesy of Pinnacle Architecture.

“Theoretically it sells itself,” says Todd Berryhill, vice president of development for Venture Corporation, a real estate development company in Larkspur, Calif. Since 2001, the firm has built some 35 commercial condominium developments along the West Coast. Market conditions in Oregon, including a drop in office vacancy rates, have finally aligned enough to turn Venture’s eyes to the Beaver State.

“It’s the next logical extension for us,” Berryhill said. “We’ve wanted to be in Portland for a long time, and this is something that hasn’t been done a lot here, which is great for us.”

Venture has two commercial condominium projects planned for Portland suburbs. The first will be five buildings on 10 acres in Hillsboro near the Tanasbourne Town Center. Condominium spaces will be office and flex space and will range in size from 1,000 to 3,200 square feet. The second will be an office and retail condominium center off Interstate 205 in West Linn.

COMMERCIAL CONDOS ARE FINDING HOMES in more unlikely markets, as well, such as Portland’s Central Eastside Industrial District.

Over the past few years, the district has seen resurgence as new businesses and creative services have moved into an area that was once filled primarily with urban industry. Expanded interpretations of industrial zoning code and renovated buildings from the likes of Beam Construction and Management LLC have made the area popular for small firms seeking office, warehouse and flex space.

So far, however, there haven’t been many opportunities for businesses to buy these spaces. That’s one of the primary motivators behind the proposed Yamhill Industrial Workspace building, a seven-story, 72,000-square-foot building in the district that will be offered as commercial condominiums.

“There’s such a demand for workspace down here,” says Works Partnership’s Neburka, whose firm designed the building. “And it’s not just a demand to have quality space, but to be able to own it too.

“The nature of this district is small businesses and small businesses working together, so there’s also a real interest and emphasis on having owner-occupied space here.”

The commercial condominium has started to catch on in the Bend area as well. There, soaring land prices and a lack of developable land within the urban growth boundary have made it nearly impossible for some small businesses to even consider owning their own work space.

“Say you wanted an office building and you needed 3,000 square feet,” says Peter Baer, principal at Pinnacle Architecture. “By the time you bought the land and built the building, you could easily be $2 million into it. A lot of people just don’t have the wherewithal.”

Baer has teamed up with developers, real- estate agents and bankers on a commercial condo project known as Mt. Bachelor Center, which is to break ground on Bend’s west side July 1.

The three-building development likely will offer 100,000 square feet of office and retail condominium spaces, though Baer says future market forces may lead to residential condos in the third building whenever it is built.

The target owner for condos in Mt. Bachelor Center, according to Baer, will be the same kind of professionals and small businesses that in Bend, Portland and elsewhere are looking for ways to buy their own workspace without breaking the bank.

“It provides a way for office and retail professionals to get some equity position,” he says. “It gives them a start in the market.”


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