Construction in downtown Seattle is booming.
At least one construction project has broken ground each week, on average, since the start of 2016. The Downtown Seattle Association’s Mid-year Development Guide estimates there are more buildings under construction in this metro’s downtown area now than at any time in the past 11 years.
“With a strong and growing economy, a large anchor office tenant and a portfolio of companies that is both diversifying and expanding, demand for space remains high,” states the Guide, which is based on research generated by the Metropolitan Improvement District’s Business Development & Market Research team. “Downtown Seattle development is poised to continue delivering new inventory in a number of sectors at a solid pace.”
According to the website Sperling’s Best Places, Seattle’s unemployment rate is 4%, and the metro is expected to increase its jobs by 41.3% over the next 10 years (compared to 36.1% for the U.S. as a whole).
The Association’s President and CEO, Jon Scholes, attributes this construction boom, in part, to decisions by major employers to locate in the heart of the city. “This continued progress is a result of public and private collaboration focused on the core fundamentals of successful urban places including protecting the retail core, supporting arts and culture and investing in transit and multi-family housing. This development activity is supporting construction and related jobs, increasing density and walkability, and producing more housing stock.”
Sixty-five buildings are under construction in downtown Seattle, nearly all of which are scheduled for delivery next year, which would be more than in any prior year since the Association started tracking this metric. The $3.5 billion that’s currently invested in downtown development is more than two times the $1.6 billion that were invested five years ago.
This recent construction activity is helping to resuscitate construction employment in Seattle, which in the first quarter of 2016 rose to around 96,000, according to the Washington Employment Security Department.
The multifamily construction sector in this market’s downtown is particularly strong. Downtown has added more than 12,000 units since 2010, and set a record with 3,600 deliveries in 2015 alone. However, the vacancy rate for 50-unit and larger properties in King and Snohomish counties (Seattle and its suburbs) stands at 3.86% (excluding new construction), a new low for the region, according to Apartment Insights Washington, which tracks real estate activity in the state.
The Downtown Seattle Association estimates there are now 43 residential buildings under construction, and 708 units having been completed so far this year. The downtown area is on track to complete another 8,661 units by the end of 2017. There are also more than 20,000 residential apartments scheduled for completion after 2017 (although most of these are currently in pre-construction phase).
In 2015, 2.7 million sf of office space were delivered. And there are 14 million sf of office space in the development pipeline, or more than had been developed in this metro’s downtown aggregately in the last 11 years. Within the past 18 months, more than 3 million sf of new office space were completed, and 6 million sf are under construction. Amazon’s expansion in the South Lake Union and Denny Triangle neighborhoods accounts for more than 2 million sf of office space that’s under construction. Ultimately, Amazon may occupy more than 12 million sf of downtown office space in Seattle.
Fourteen million sf of office space are in the development pipeline in downtown Seattle, more than had been developed there aggregately in the past 11 years. Image: Downtown Seattle Association
Other office construction projects of note include Madison Centre (746,000 sf), The Mark (538,000 sf), and Midtown 21 (365,000 sf). “With companies such as Facebook, F5 and Amazon expanding their presence, and new to Downtown companies like Expedia, Google and Weyerhaeuser adding their workforces to the mix, demand is poised to continue to be robust,” the Association states.
The hotel sector is another example of how Downtown Seattle has flipped the switch. It already has 14,000 hotel rooms, but from 2011 through the first half of 2016, fewer than 700 rooms were added. Now, there are 1,471 rooms scheduled for completion in 2017, and another 1,468 in 2018.
Prominent projects include R.C. Hedreen’s 8th and Howell, a 1,260-room convention hotel that is currently in the demolition, shoring, and excavation phase.
To view an interactive development and construction projects map, click here.
Related Stories
Market Data | Aug 15, 2018
National asking rents for office space rise again
The rise in rental rates marks the 21st consecutive quarterly increase.
Market Data | Aug 13, 2018
First Half 2018 commercial and multifamily construction starts show mixed performance across top metropolitan areas
Gains reported in five of the top ten markets.
Market Data | Aug 10, 2018
Construction material prices inch down in July
Nonresidential construction input prices increased fell 0.3% in July but are up 9.6% year over year.
Market Data | Aug 9, 2018
Projections reveal nonresidential construction spending to grow
AIA releases latest Consensus Construction Forecast.
Market Data | Aug 7, 2018
New supply's impact illustrated in Yardi Matrix national self storage report for July
The metro with the most units under construction and planned as a percent of existing inventory in mid-July was Nashville, Tenn.
Market Data | Aug 3, 2018
U.S. multifamily rents reach new heights in July
Favorable economic conditions produce a sunny summer for the apartment sector.
Market Data | Aug 2, 2018
Nonresidential construction spending dips in June
“The hope is that June’s construction spending setback is merely a statistical aberration,” said ABC Chief Economist Anirban Basu.
Market Data | Aug 1, 2018
U.S. hotel construction pipeline continues moderate growth year-over-year
The hotel construction pipeline has been growing moderately and incrementally each quarter.
Market Data | Jul 30, 2018
Nonresidential fixed investment surges in second quarter
Nonresidential fixed investment represented an especially important element of second quarter strength in the advance estimate.
Market Data | Jul 11, 2018
Construction material prices increase steadily in June
June represents the latest month associated with rapidly rising construction input prices.