Except for a few pockets of ultra-luxury condo action—New York, San Francisco, and parts of Florida, Hawaii, and metro Washington, D.C.—today’s multifamily story is all about rentals. “The apartment sector has been a darling for investors over the past two years,” notes the Urban Land Institute in its recent Real Estate Consensus Forecast. Vacancy rates are at an enticing 5.0%, and rental rates should be up 5.0% this year, although ULI does forecast some slippage next year, to 4.0%.
“Investors continue to view apartments as a preferred asset class in today’s environment,” says Dale Connor, Lend Lease’s Managing Director, Project Management & Construction, Americas. He sees developers playing catch-up to meet the growing demand for apartments, especially in the top five rental markets: New York City, Washington, D.C., Boston, Chicago, and Los Angeles.
SCROLL DOWN FOR GIANTS 300 MULTIFAMILY FIRM RANKINGS
Savvy market-rate developers are looking for locations around universities, innovation incubators, and teaching hospitals, says Ray Kimsey, AIA, LEED AP, President of Atlanta-based Niles Bolton Associates. Land that was once set aside for retail or office development is being looked at for multifamily, especially if served by urban transit.
“If you look at the hottest neighborhoods around Washington, D.C., Pittsburgh, or Baltimore, they all have an influx of Gen-Y people graduating and wanting to stay in that environment,” he says. Kimsey says there’s even a movement toward walk-up, garden-style apartments in some suburbs and second- and third-tier cities.
The use of urban infill sites is adding to the popularity of podium-style multifamily construction, says Mathew Dougherty, PE, Vice President with McShane Construction, Rosemont, Ill. “The podium ‘stacks’ uses vertically within the existing floor plate, thereby allowing a mixed format of ground-floor retail, parking floors, and residential floor plates,” he says.
According to John Lahey, AIA, Managing Principal at Chicago-based Solomon Cordwell Buenz Associates, the rental market is being shaped by two factors: service and community.
“Service” refers to the heightened demand for amenities: party rooms, surround-sound movie theaters, fully equipped fitness centers, mega-size video screens in common areas, computer golf games that let you play any course in the world, I-GO car rentals—even “restaurant days,” where a local restaurant comes in and sells takeout dinners one night a week.
There are even amenities for canine occupants. “People love their dogs,” says Lahey, so dog walks, dog parks, dog washing bays, and dog walking and grooming services are becoming de rigueur in many large (>400 units) complexes. “People want their lives to be easier,” he says. “They want to be taken care of.”
Tenants are demanding more green amenities, says Kimsey. “Expectations about energy conservation and sustainable features are now viewed as a basic right by many tenants,” he says. “If they lived in a LEED-certified residence hall in college they want a LEED apartment”—but not if it costs more than market rate.
“Community” refers to the renter’s need for connection, says Lahey. In past decades, apartment dwellers put a premium on privacy. Less so today. “A lot of people who move back into the city, they’re not confirmed urban dwellers, and they want to meet people,” he says. “The Starbucks in your building becomes the meeting place to get integrated into the larger community.” McShane’s Dougherty says wifi connectivity has become a given in new and renovated rental projects.
“The design must be hot,” says Kimsey. The units themselves may be “smaller, tighter,” but that means they must be more elegant and efficient, with open layouts and near-condo-like finishes. McShane’s Dougherty says granite countertops, stainless steel appliances, upgraded bathrooms, and high-quality flooring are expected, even in suburban garden apartments. Developers are increasingly concerned about sound attenuation, he says, so insulation choices, assembly details, and materials selection are crucial.
Looking ahead, SCB’s Lahey says that, unlike the condo market, apartment development needs to be left to the pros—firms like AMLI, Avalon Bay, Equity Residential, Forest City, The Habitat Company. “They have the track record, and they really do know what they’re doing,” he says.
“The money is out there,” says Kimsey, but it’s split between smaller projects being funded by S&Ls and smaller banks, and big projects attracting institutional and private-equity investors. Holding back the pent-up demand: anemic job creation, which limits new household formation.
Even with low mortgage rates, many potential buyers have become skittish about purchasing a home, says Lend Lease’s Connor. SCB’s Lahey cites mobility as another factor in rental’s favor, especially with the younger generation.
“People will like living closer in, and units will get bigger, something decent in size, and they’ll be willing to pay for it,” he says. “They’ll see a home as a place in which to live, not necessarily as an investment.” +
TOP 25 MULTIFAMILY SECTOR ARCHITECTURE FIRMS
Rank | Company | 2011 Multifamily Sector Revenue ($) |
1 | IBI Group | 38,489,114 |
2 | Niles Bolton Associates | 13,772,650 |
3 | Solomon Cordwell Buenz | 12,000,000 |
4 | RTKL Associates | 11,397,556 |
5 | WDG Architecture | 9,817,297 |
6 | Perkins Eastman | 9,100,000 |
7 | HOK | 8,715,422 |
8 | Perkins+Will | 7,193,120 |
9 | ZGF Architects | 6,225,112 |
10 | Cooper Carry | 5,708,482 |
11 | Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates | 5,280,000 |
12 | Ziegler Cooper Architects | 4,853,598 |
13 | Harley Ellis Devereaux | 4,800,000 |
14 | PGAL | 4,607,900 |
15 | OZ Architecture | 4,104,475 |
16 | GBBN Architects | 3,700,000 |
17 | Smallwood, Reynolds, Stewart, Stewart & Associates | 3,605,928 |
18 | VOA Associates | 3,367,000 |
19 | Carrier Johnson + CULTURE | 3,324,072 |
20 | Skidmore, Owings & Merrill | 3,074,000 |
21 | Gensler | 2,800,000 |
22 | Rule Joy Trammell + Rubio | 2,600,000 |
23 | FXFOWLE Architects | 2,399,900 |
24 | HKS | 2,398,926 |
25 | Mithun | 1,906,000 |
TOP 25 MULTIFAMILY SECTOR ENGINEERING FIRMS
Rank | Company | 2011 Multifamily Sector Revenue ($) |
1 | STV | 119,671,000 |
2 | AECOM Technology Corp. | 36,000,000 |
3 | Parsons Brinckerhoff | 32,800,000 |
4 | URS Corp. | 28,500,000 |
5 | Michael Baker Jr., Inc. | 23,620,000 |
6 | WSP USA | 17,200,000 |
7 | Jacobs | 16,000,000 |
8 | Atkins North America | 15,368,901 |
9 | Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates | 14,372,000 |
10 | KPFF Consulting Engineers | 12,000,000 |
11 | Simpson Gumpertz & Heger | 9,740,000 |
12 | Thornton Tomasetti | 7,610,000 |
13 | Stantec | 6,345,000 |
14 | Clark Nexsen | 5,308,534 |
15 | Arup | 4,600,161 |
16 | Coffman Engineers | 4,000,000 |
17 | Magnusson Klemencic Associates | 3,556,559 |
18 | Rolf Jensen & Associates | 2,600,000 |
19 | Aon Fire Protection Engineering | 2,250,000 |
20 | Smith Seckman Reid | 2,227,000 |
21 | Paulus, Sokolowski and Sartor | 1,800,000 |
22 | Science Applications International Corp. | 1,530,000 |
23 | Lilker Associates Consulting Engineers | 1,500,000 |
24 | French & Parrello Associates | 1,396,720 |
25 | AKF Group | 1,300,000 |
TOP 25 MULTIFAMILY SECTOR CONSTRUCTION FIRMS
Rank | Company | 2011 Multifamily Sector Revenue ($) |
1 | Lend Lease | 734,160,150 |
2 | Clark Group | 612,803,196 |
3 | Balfour Beatty US | 441,602,518 |
4 | Walsh Group, The | 342,877,063 |
5 | Whiting-Turner Contracting Co., The | 283,477,065 |
6 | Turner Corp., The | 223,410,000 |
7 | Swinerton | 186,340,000 |
8 | Harkins Builders | 180,000,000 |
9 | McShane Co., The | 175,000,000 |
10 | Yates Co., The | 173,900,000 |
11 | PCL Construction Enterprises | 159,105,415 |
12 | Bernards | 144,000,000 |
13 | Paric Corp. | 138,000,000 |
14 | Hensel Phelps Construction Co. | 137,700,000 |
15 | Weis Builders | 131,960,000 |
16 | CORE Construction | 125,513,227 |
17 | Suffolk Construction | 111,885,268 |
18 | Power Construction | 106,000,000 |
19 | Weitz Company., The | 82,000,000 |
20 | Austin Industries | 77,074,905 |
21 | Brasfield & Gorrie | 67,682,938 |
22 | Absher Construction | 61,807,647 |
23 | James McHugh Construction | 54,624,665 |
24 | Bette Co., The | 54,000,000 |
25 | Choate Construction Co. | 51,875,781 |
Related Stories
Giants 400 | Dec 12, 2023
Top 35 Veterans Affairs Facility Architecture Firms for 2023
LEO A DALY, Page Southerland Page, Guidon, and HDR top BD+C's ranking of the nation's largest Veterans Affairs facility architecture and architecture/engineering (AE) firms for 2023, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2023 Giants 400 Report.
Giants 400 | Dec 12, 2023
Top 40 Military Facility Architecture Firms for 2023
Michael Baker International, HDR, Whitman, Requardt & Associates, and Stantec top BD+C's ranking of the nation's largest military facility architecture and architecture/engineering (AE) firms for 2023, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2023 Giants 400 Report.
Office Buildings | Dec 12, 2023
Transforming workplaces for employee mental health
Lauren Elliott, Director of Interior Design, Design Collaborative, shares practical tips and strategies for workplace renovation that prioritizes employee mental health.
Giants 400 | Dec 11, 2023
Top 150 Local Government Building Architecture Firms for 2023
Gensler, HOK, Stantec, and Skidmore, Owings & Merrill top BD+C's ranking of the nation's largest local government building architecture and architecture/engineering (AE) firms for 2023, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2023 Giants 400 Report.
Giants 400 | Dec 11, 2023
Top 90 State Government Building Architecture Firms for 2023
Page Southerland Page, Skidmore, Owings & Merrill, Stantec, and NORR top BD+C's ranking of the nation's largest state government building architecture and architecture/engineering (AE) firms for 2023, as reported in Building Design+Construction's 2023 Giants 400 Report.
Codes and Standards | Dec 11, 2023
Washington state tries new approach to phase out fossil fuels in new construction
After pausing a heat pump mandate earlier this year after a federal court overturned Berkeley, Calif.’s ban on gas appliances in new buildings, Washington state enacted a new code provision that seems poised to achieve the same goal.
Green | Dec 11, 2023
U.S. has tools to meet commercial building sector decarbonization goals early
The U.S. has the tools to reduce commercial building-related emissions to reach target goals in 2029, earlier than what it committed to when it signed the Paris Agreement, according to a report by the U.S. Green Building Council.
MFPRO+ News | Dec 11, 2023
U.S. poorly prepared to house growing number of older adults
The U.S. is ill-prepared to provide adequate housing for the growing ranks of older people, according to a report from Harvard University’s Joint Center for Housing Studies. Over the next decade, the U.S. population older than 75 will increase by 45%, growing from 17 million to nearly 25 million, with many expected to struggle financially.
Office Buildings | Dec 11, 2023
Believe it or not, there could be a shortage of office space in the years ahead
With work-from-home firmly established, many real estate analysts predict a dramatic reduction in office space leasing and plummeting property values. But the high-end of the office segment might actually be headed for a shortage, according to real estate intelligence company CoStar Group.
University Buildings | Dec 8, 2023
Yale University breaks ground on nation's largest Living Building student housing complex
A groundbreaking on Oct. 11 kicked off a project aiming to construct the largest Living Building Challenge-certified residence on a university campus. The Living Village, a 45,000 sf home for Yale University Divinity School graduate students, “will make an ecological statement about the need to build in harmony with the natural world while training students to become ‘apostles of the environment’,” according to Bruner/Cott, which is leading the design team that includes Höweler + Yoon Architecture and Andropogon Associates.