A few days ago, The Wall Street Journal reported that one-sixth of all office space under construction nationwide is located in the Houston metropolitan area.
The Journal quoted the property data firm CoStar Group, which stated that by the end of 2014, 80 buildings with about 18 million sf of office space were started in Greater Houston.
This wouldn’t be earthshaking news—Houston, after all, continues to be one of country’s more vibrant markets, ranking 39th out of 300 of the largest metropolitan economies worldwide, according to the Brookings Institution’s Global MetroMonitor—were it not for the fact that all this office construction is occurring at a time when the price of oil—a commodity that helps lubricate Houston’s economic engine—has plummeted by more than 50% since last summer.
Several of the biggest energy companies have announced more than 30,000 layoffs worldwide, and a sizable number of those workers could be Houstonians. Fewer workers require fewer offices, and employers are already rushing to sublease the space they occupy, the Journal reports.
Sources: WSJ, CoStar Group
In a follow-up story, the Journal reports that 13.2 million sf of office space are on schedule to be completed in 2015, the highest total since 1984.
CoStar now estimates that Houston’s vacancy rate could rise to 15.3% by 2016, from 10.8% at the end of 2014.
The newspaper singles out one development firm, Hines, that’s building a 48-story tower on spec, without tenants lined up, as an example of how certain companies suddenly find themselves exposed to a potential economic downturn. On the flip side, excess office space and higher vacancy rates could lead to lower rents, and opportunities to find existing space rather than building new.
HOUSTON NOT AS OIL DEPENDENT
But is Houston really headed for a fall? Not if you listen to some of the comments posted about the Journal article. One reader insisted that Houston is nowhere near as oil dependent as it was in the 1980s, when its housing market all but collapsed and nine of Texas’s 10 largest banks failed.
“Houston is twice as large as it was in 1980, and its dynamic economy is now twice as diversified,” one reader commented. “Also, the oil industry has fortified itself since 1980. Houston now boasts 11 major economic sectors in its massive economy.”
(Similar arguments about Louisiana’s supposedly more-diverse economy were made recently in an article published by The Advocate in Baton Rouge, La., which reported that only 13% of that state’s proceeds is now tied to mineral revenue, compared to 42% in the 1980s.)
A recent survey of Houston-area purchasing managers at 45 companies found that those not so tightly bound to oil prices—such as utilities and non-energy manufacturing—have seen a boost in new orders, production levels, and supplier purchases.
“We’ll have to see where things go in the next few months,” Ross Harvison, Chairman of the Institute for Supply Management-Houston Business Survey Committee, told the Houston Chronicle.
Even the Journal article acknowledges that any “bust” in Houston’s economy might turn out to be short term. The newspaper quotes Mike Mair, Executive VP in charge of Skanska’s construction in Houston, who says his company isn’t panicking about what he concedes could be as “soft” 2015. Skanska is currently building two 12-story towers, one of which doesn’t have tenants yet, and Mair says those projects will proceed. “I’m not afraid of ’16 and ’17,” he is quoted as saying.
Mair’s optimism is promulgated, in part, on long-range projections about Houston’s population, now at around 6.5 million. The Texas State Data Centers expects that people count to expand by an average 2.2 million residents per decade over the next 40 years.
Even with falling oil prices, Houston is expected to add 62,900 jobs in 2015, according to the Greater Houston Partnership. Most cities would welcome such a bounty, but the bar is set higher for Houston, which added 120,000 jobs last year.
Related Stories
Office Buildings | Sep 22, 2016
‘Floating’ triangular glass building from Foster + Partners breaks ground in Copenhagen
The glass building provides the illusion of floating above a stone plinth.
Office Buildings | Sep 20, 2016
Sterling Bay proposes SOM-designed office tower near Chicago’s newly opened Transit Center at Union Station
The building is one of several projects that are filling this developer’s plate in this city.
Office Buildings | Sep 8, 2016
Taipei’s Lè Architecture, designed by Aedas, is almost complete
The 18-story building is designed to resemble a moss-covered river pebble in Taipei’s Nangang District.
Office Buildings | Sep 2, 2016
Eight-story digital installation added as part of ESI Design’s renovation of Denver’s Wells Fargo Center
The crown jewel of a three-year makeover project, the LED columns bring the building’s lobby to life.
Codes and Standards | Sep 1, 2016
Overuse of air conditioning hurts office productivity
A study found temperatures in the low 70s reduce worker performance.
| Aug 12, 2016
OFFICE GIANTS: Technology is giving office workers the chance to play musical chairs
Technology is redefining how offices function and is particularly salient in the growing trend of "hoteling" and "hot seating" or "free addressing."
| Aug 12, 2016
Top 70 Office Engineering Firms
Jacobs, AECOM, and Thornton Tomasetti top Building Design+Construction’s annual ranking of the nation’s largest office sector engineering and E/A firms, as reported in the 2016 Giants 300 Report.
| Aug 12, 2016
Top 100 Office Construction Firms
Turner Construction Co., Structure Tone, and Gilbane Building Co. top Building Design+Construction’s annual ranking of the nation’s largest office sector construction and construction management firms, as reported in the 2016 Giants 300 Report.
| Aug 12, 2016
Top 100 Office Architecture Firms
Gensler, HOK, and Perkins+Will top Building Design+Construction’s annual ranking of the nation’s largest office sector architecture and A/E firms, as reported in the 2016 Giants 300 Report.
Office Buildings | Jul 29, 2016
The ROI of company culture: Why companies should look at culture’s impact on profit
Organizations that purposefully craft and develop their culture experience a 14% turnover rate, whereas organizations that ignore their culture experience a 48% turnover rate, writes PDR Senior Consultant Christine Mikhail.