Pop quiz time: Of the total retail sales in 2013, what percentage came from online shopping?
Twenty-five percent? Nope, lower. Twenty percent? Not even close. Ten percent? Getting warmer.
Would you believe that, even with the e-commerce sector’s torrid pace of growth during the past decade, online sales represented just 6% of all retail business last year?
The gloom-and-doom scenario for bricks-and-mortar retail that is portrayed in the media is grossly overstated. It makes for good headlines, but it’s not based in fact, according to Jones Lang LaSalle’s latest retail sector outlook.
“Remember catalogs? Flipping through the pages, dialing up a call center, and placing an order? Web sales are really just replacing that,” said Kris Cooper, Managing Director, JLL Capital Markets. “People still need to see and touch things. The instant gratification of an in-store purchase can’t be discounted. Retailers who want to thrive will need to incorporate it all—hands-on goods, e-commerce, and mobile commerce.”
Giants 300 coverage of Retail brought to you by: C.R. Laurence www.crlaurence.com.
That’s not to say the retail sector doesn’t have its issues. There has been a spate of big-name store closings recently—including Coldwater Creek, Office Depot, and Radio Shack—and retailers continue to struggle to adjust to the structural changes occurring in their industry.
But, all in all, the U.S. retail sector is faring quite well, according to JLL, continuing its solid recovery and exhibiting tightening market conditions. The real estate group expects asking rents nationally to rise 2.7% this year, following 1.1% growth in 2013, and vacancy rates to drop more than 6% for the second straight year.
Net absorption was up a whopping 42% in 2013, to 83.2 million sf. With increased demand for retail space, landlords are starting to exert some power in tenant selection and lease terms, according to JLL.
Here are some highlights from the firm’s Spring 2014 Cross Sector Outlook (http://tinyurl.com/JLLCrossSectorOutlook):
• Power centers are experiencing the tightest overall market conditions, with a total vacancy rate of just 5.1%.
• Investment dollars are flowing into high-quality, grocery-anchored centers and trophy malls. “Demand for those asset types is incredible right now—if only we could convince all the owners to bring those to market,” said Margaret Caldwell, Managing Director, JLL Capital Markets.
• Construction growth will remain marginal during the next 12 months. New construction is focused primarily on single-tenant big-box and discount/wholesale space. Of the multi-tenant projects under construction, the majority are in urban cores and peripheral outlet centers.
• As the market continues to recover, the retail construction sector will eventually see an uptick in construction where tenants demand new space because supply is so constrained, where rents are high enough to justify construction, and where there are few barriers to new development, such as Orlando, Fla.
• Retail property transactions were strong in 2013. Sales of significant retail properties totaled more than $60.8 billion in 2013, up 8% from the previous year. Sales of strip centers and single-tenant properties fared even better, rising 26% year over year.
• There are strong opportunities for development in Sunbelt markets with higher-than-average population growth rates, including Charlotte, N.C., Orlando, and Raleigh, N.C.
SIGNS OF LIFE FOR SHOPPING CENTERS
For the first time since 2007, shopping center development in the U.S. increased year over year, according to Cushman & Wakefield’s new Global Shopping Center Development Report (http://tinyurl.com/CWreport). Nearly 400 shopping centers totaling more than 12.2 million sm of gross leasable area (GLA) were completed in 2013, an increase of 12.7% compared to the previous year.
In fact, the U.S. has accounted for roughly 18% of all new shopping center space delivered worldwide since 2008, according to the report. And there’s no slowdown in sight.
During the next three years, an additional 758 centers containing approximately 11.2 million sm of new GLA will be added to the U.S. inventory, two-thirds of which is expected to be completed in 2014 alone. Developments in California, Florida, and Texas will make up about a third of all new shopping center construction during this period, according to Cushman & Wakefield.
While the large malls get all the headlines—like the long-delayed, 274,000-sm American Dream Meadowlands development in East Rutherford, N.J., and the 149,000-sm Shops at Summerlin (Nev.) Centre—the vast majority of new construction projects are small shopping centers, between 5,000 sm and 20,000 sm, with the average project at 17,700 sm.
Top Retail Architecture Firms
Rank | Company | 2013 Retail Revenue |
1 | Callison | $109,251,013 |
2 | Gensler | 105,979,349 |
3 | RTKL Associates | 66,018,000 |
4 | MulvannyG2 Architecture | 60,000,000 |
5 | Stantec | 57,434,454 |
6 | WD Partners | 44,000,000 |
7 | RSP Architects | 36,346,000 |
8 | Little | 27,786,704 |
9 | MBH Architects | 25,106,000 |
10 | FRCH Design Worldwide | 24,600,000 |
11 | P+R Architects | 19,191,791 |
12 | Architects Orange | 14,036,393 |
13 | CTA Architects Engineers | 14,020,991 |
14 | DLR Group | 13,900,000 |
15 | NORR | 12,997,934 |
16 | CASCO Diversified Corp. | 12,500,000 |
17 | Bergmann Associates | 12,416,000 |
18 | Nadel | 9,000,000 |
19 | Perkins Eastman | 7,750,000 |
20 | Ware Malcomb | 7,600,000 |
21 | HOK | 7,345,023 |
22 | Good Fulton & Farrell | 7,324,000 |
23 | LawKingdon Architecture | 7,250,000 |
24 | Cooper Carry | 4,000,988 |
25 | API | 3,800,000 |
26 | Massa Montalto Architects | 3,482,000 |
27 | Beyer Blinder Belle | 3,205,403 |
28 | RS&H | 2,450,000 |
29 | Smallwood, Reynolds, Stewart, Stewart & Associates | 2,391,617 |
30 | Vocon | 2,366,525 |
31 | Gresham, Smith and Partners | 2,299,000 |
32 | Cuningham Group Architecture | 2,166,411 |
33 | ai Design Group | 2,093,530 |
34 | Solomon Cordwell Buenz | 1,700,000 |
35 | LPA | 1,637,397 |
36 | BLTa | 1,302,000 |
37 | NBBJ | 1,285,000 |
38 | Kohn Pedersen Fox Associates | 1,280,000 |
39 | TK Architects | 1,155,876 |
40 | LS3P | 1,061,129 |
41 | Ratio Architects | 990,326 |
42 | Eppstein Uhen Architects | 954,480 |
43 | RDH Interests | 922,242 |
44 | Carrier Johnson + Culture | 702,235 |
45 | Environetics | 625,747 |
46 | Colkitt & Company | 600,000 |
47 | GBBN Architects | 558,000 |
48 | Harvard Jolly Architecture | 533,943 |
49 | VOA Associates | 521,057 |
50 | JRS Architect | 490,000 |
51 | WATG | Wimberly Interiors | 472,000 |
52 | SchenkelShultz Architecture | 453,000 |
53 | Nelson | 393,822 |
54 | Goodwyn Mills & Cawood | 378,423 |
55 | Wight & Company | 371,000 |
56 | Moody Nolan | 361,308 |
57 | PGAL | 350,300 |
58 | Parkhill, Smith & Cooper | 336,000 |
59 | Montroy Andersen DeMarco | 310,000 |
60 | Becker Morgan Group | 287,996 |
61 | PHX Architecture | 280,000 |
62 | Morris Architects | 260,000 |
63 | BRPH | 225,000 |
64 | Mithun | 210,000 |
65 | FitzGerald Associates Architects | 151,500 |
66 | Clark Nexsen | 143,328 |
67 | Commonwealth Architects | 141,268 |
68 | Baskervill | 115,284 |
69 | Skidmore, Owings & Merrill | 108,913 |
70 | Adache Group Architects | 100,000 |
71 | Corgan | 74,847 |
72 | Hnedak Bobo Group | 72,000 |
73 | Hoefer Wysocki Architecture | 70,000 |
74 | Niles Bolton Associates | 65,728 |
75 | ATA Beilharz Architects | 60,180 |
76 | Hensley Lamkin Rachel | 50,000 |
77 | KZF Design | 47,356 |
78 | Heery International | 45,840 |
79 | TEG Architects | 12,163 |
Top Retail Engineering Firms
Rank | Company | 2013 Retail Revenue |
1 | Jacobs | $182,720,000 |
2 | AECOM Technology Corp. | 105,890,000 |
3 | Henderson Engineers | 43,369,857 |
4 | URS Corp. | 36,003,188 |
5 | Wiss, Janney, Elstner Associates | 19,090,000 |
6 | Parsons Brinckerhoff | 16,431,889 |
7 | Dewberry | 9,513,612 |
8 | Thornton Tomasetti | 8,339,454 |
9 | Wallace Engineering | 7,667,000 |
10 | KLH Engineers | 6,506,748 |
11 | Shive-Hattery | 6,232,480 |
12 | Arup | 5,674,014 |
13 | Dunham Associates | 5,500,000 |
14 | Highland Associates | 4,600,000 |
15 | Magnusson Klemencic Associates | 4,133,492 |
16 | Coffman Engineers | 3,992,285 |
17 | Hixson Architecture, Engineering, Interiors | 3,100,000 |
18 | Davis, Bowen & Friedel | 2,748,648 |
19 | Leidos | 2,520,000 |
20 | WSP Group | 2,270,000 |
21 | Fishbeck, Thompson, Carr & Huber | 2,200,000 |
22 | AKF Group | 2,140,000 |
23 | French & Parrello Associates | 1,985,000 |
24 | KJWW Engineering Consultants | 1,686,418 |
25 | RDK Engineers | 1,670,000 |
26 | Martin/Martin | 1,614,144 |
27 | Interface Engineering | 1,573,325 |
28 | Simpson Gumpertz & Heger | 1,570,000 |
29 | Aon Fire Protection Engineering Corp. | 1,500,000 |
30 | CTLGroup | 1,450,000 |
31 | SSOE Group | 1,423,552 |
32 | Graef | 1,189,813 |
33 | Bala Consulting Engineers | 1,051,000 |
34 | M-E Engineers | 1,000,000 |
35 | Heapy Engineering | 969,445 |
36 | Wick Fisher White | 893,105 |
37 | OLA Consulting Engineers | 888,800 |
38 | Walter P Moore and Associates | 847,312 |
39 | TTG | 732,500 |
40 | DeSimone Consulting Engineers | 691,425 |
41 | H.F. Lenz | 652,000 |
42 | Paulus, Sokolowski and Sartor | 650,000 |
43 | I. C. Thomasson Associates | 600,000 |
44 | Vanderweil Engineers | 576,000 |
45 | Stanley Consultants | 447,960 |
46 | Zak Companies | 422,811 |
47 | Glumac | 421,563 |
48 | Allen & Shariff | 400,000 |
49 | KCI Technologies | 400,000 |
50 | Spectrum Engineers | 345,820 |
51 | TLC Engineering for Architecture | 342,071 |
52 | G&W Engineering Corp. | 217,100 |
53 | Sparling | 204,890 |
54 | Total Building Commissioning | 125,702 |
55 | Apogee Consulting Group | 115,325 |
56 | Barge Waggoner Sumner & Cannon | 100,000 |
57 | Brinjac Engineering | 80,270 |
58 | GHT Limited | 75,000 |
Top Retail Construction Firms
Rank | Company | 2013 Retail Revenue |
1 | PCL Construction | $517,371,436 |
2 | Whiting-Turner Contracting Co., The | 479,057,948 |
3 | Shawmut Design and Construction | 386,000,000 |
4 | EMJ Corp. | 317,000,000 |
5 | Turner Construction | 236,380,000 |
6 | Balfour Beatty US | 195,847,685 |
7 | Lend Lease | 150,997,000 |
8 | Yates Companies, The | 122,000,000 |
9 | Hawkins Construction | 98,500,000 |
10 | Gray Construction | 97,770,000 |
11 | O'Neil Industries/W.E. O'Neil | 93,703,312 |
12 | Beck Group, The | 81,576,752 |
13 | Power Construction | 78,000,000 |
14 | S. M. Wilson & Co. | 72,877,695 |
15 | E.W. Howell | 71,900,000 |
16 | Structure Tone | 71,080,000 |
17 | DPR Construction | 70,199,893 |
18 | Choate Construction | 68,627,625 |
19 | KBE Building Corp. | 68,022,822 |
20 | Ryan Companies US | 67,191,615 |
21 | Weitz Company, The | 64,819,854 |
22 | Pepper Construction | 62,870,000 |
23 | JE Dunn Construction | 62,738,348 |
24 | Graycor | 59,864,863 |
25 | Hoar Construction | 53,500,000 |
26 | Hill & Wilkinson | 51,935,000 |
27 | McCarthy Holdings | 50,650,000 |
28 | Management Resource Systems | 45,255,861 |
29 | Leopardo Companies | 39,729,783 |
30 | Weis Builders | 37,993,000 |
31 | URS Corp. | 36,003,188 |
32 | Layton Construction | 35,900,000 |
33 | Clark Group | 35,131,316 |
34 | Brasfield & Gorrie | 33,249,173 |
35 | EBCO General Contractor | 33,134,000 |
36 | JLL | 30,323,117 |
37 | Paric Corp. | 25,000,000 |
38 | Skanska USA | 24,038,261 |
39 | C.W. Driver | 23,670,000 |
40 | James G. Davis Construction | 22,850,344 |
41 | Walbridge | 22,200,000 |
42 | Hill International | 21,000,000 |
43 | Tutor Perini Corp. | 20,562,786 |
44 | Bomel Construction | 19,179,585 |
45 | Kraus-Anderson Construction | 19,000,000 |
46 | Clune Construction | 17,825,626 |
47 | Austin Commercial | 17,584,385 |
48 | CORE Construction Group | 17,295,729 |
49 | Parsons Brinckerhoff | 16,431,889 |
50 | Hoffman Construction | 14,000,000 |
51 | LeChase Construction Services | 13,120,000 |
52 | Gilbane | 12,521,010 |
53 | IMC Construction | 12,332,000 |
54 | Kitchell Corp. | 11,602,544 |
55 | Suffolk Construction | 10,523,993 |
56 | McShane Companies, The | 6,599,886 |
57 | Manhattan Construction | 6,170,000 |
58 | Bernards | 4,700,000 |
59 | Adolfson & Peterson Construction | 3,534,704 |
60 | Robins & Morton | 3,351,771 |
61 | Batson-Cook | 2,741,450 |
62 | Stalco Construction | 2,310,600 |
63 | Bette Companies, The | 1,548,000 |
64 | Walsh Group, The | 1,485,547 |
65 | W. M. Jordan Company | 965,753 |
66 | Douglas Company, The | 772,135 |
67 | Allen & Shariff | 400,000 |
68 | Alberici Constructors | 156,054 |
Read full 2014 Giants 300 Report
Related Stories
| Aug 11, 2010
EwingCole to merge with healthcare specialist Robert D. Lynn Associates
EwingCole, a nationally recognized architectural, engineering, interior design, and planning firm with more than 320 professionals, today announced that it will combine its practice with Robert D. Lynn Associates of Philadelphia, a 40-person firm with a robust portfolio of healthcare projects. The combination will create the Delaware Valley¹s largest and most comprehensive firm with an emphasis on healthcare architecture, and a national scope and presence.
| Aug 11, 2010
Jacobs, Arup, AECOM top BD+C's ranking of the nation's 75 largest international design firms
A ranking of the Top 75 International Design Firms based on Building Design+Construction's 2009 Giants 300 survey. For more Giants 300 rankings, visit http://www.BDCnetwork.com/Giants
| Aug 11, 2010
See what $3,000 a month will get you at Chicago’s Aqua Tower
Magellan Development Group has opened three display models for the rental portion of Chicago’s highly anticipated Aqua Tower, designed by Jeanne Gang. Lease rates range from $1,498 for a studio to $3,111 for a two-bedroom unit with lake views.
| Aug 11, 2010
AIANY partners with New York's building department to launch design competition for safer, more appealing sidewalk shed
The New York City Department of Buildings (DOB) and the New York Chapter of the American Institute of Architects (AIANY) today announced the launch of the urbanSHED International Design Competition with support from the Alliance for Downtown New York, ABNY Foundation, Illuminating Engineering Society New York City Section (IESNYC), and the New York Building Congress.
| Aug 11, 2010
Construction employment declines in 48 states in August compared to last year
Construction employment saw significant declines in all but two states this August compared to last year according to an analysis of new state-by-state employment figures released today by the federal government. The analysis, conducted by the Associated General Contractors of America, however did show that the number of states gaining construction jobs increased slightly in August compared to July 2009.
| Aug 11, 2010
Stimulus funding helps get NOAA project off the ground
The award-winning design for the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s (NOAA) new Southwest Fisheries Science Center (SWFSC) replacement laboratory saw its first sign of movement on Sept 15 with a groundbreaking ceremony held in La Jolla, Calif. The $102 million project is funded primarily by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA), resulting in a rapidly advanced construction plan for the facility.
| Aug 11, 2010
New book on ‘Green Workplace’ by HOK’s Leigh Stringer, a BD+C 40 under 40 winner
The new book The Green Workplace is a comprehensive guide that demonstrates how green businesses can reduce costs, improve recruitment and retention, increase shareholder value, and contribute to a healthier natural environment.
| Aug 11, 2010
BIM adoption rate exceeds 80% among nation’s largest AEC firms
The nation’s largest architecture, engineering, and construction companies are on the BIM bandwagon in a big way, according to Building Design+Construction’s premier Top 170 BIM Adopters ranking, published as part of the 2009 Giants 300 survey. Of the 320 AEC firms that participated in Giants survey, 83% report having at least one BIM seat license in house, and nearly a quarter (23%) have 100-plus seats.