dining concepts AUSTIN, TX—With food-and-beverage outlets now among the fastest-growing categories in retail centers, four emerging eatery formats are poised for significant expansion: food trucks, food halls, celebrity-chef restaurants and “grocerants,” according to a new CBRE Group Inc. report. The report highlights numerous data points that underscore the booming growth of restaurants, including the finding that total US restaurant sales surpassed grocery sales for the first time last year, according to government data, faring better since the recession than any other retail category. It also points out that, while millennials dine out more often, older generations spend more overall at restaurants. This implies more growth for restaurants as millennials age and earn more. Eric DeJernett, CCIM, senior vice president in CBRE's Austin office, tells GlobeSt.com: “Competition is fierce for quality restaurant space in Austin and landlords are paying close attention to unique concepts, best-in-class operators and quality operators with dedicated followings. One of the recent national trends is the proliferation of food trucks, which Austinites have known and loved for years. Today, we are seeing a growing trend of successful Austin food trucks evolving into brick-and-mortar operations.” The factors pointed out in the report and others collectively suggest that growth in spending at restaurants is more than a cyclical, post-recession recovery but instead a fundamental shift in American dining and spending habits. “We know that the strength of the food-and-beverage category has led to many shopping center owners seeking restaurants as anchor tenants to draw in shoppers, whereas department stores and other retailers previously filled that role,” said David Orkin , executive vice president and restaurant practice leader, CBRE. “What's particularly interesting today is that retail center owners are not only focused on traditional, proven restaurant concepts, but they are more willing than ever to embrace a broader range of emerging and, in some cases, untested concepts like food trucks which don't pay traditional rent. They are willing to take risks to compete.” CBRE enlisted its restaurant experts, led by Orkin, to identify the up-and-coming restaurant formats likely to drive the category's further expansion in retail property. These four categories offer many or all of the attributes that appeal to modern diners and shoppers: diversity, convenience, uniqueness, relative affordability and experiential focus. While food trucks don't often pay traditional rent, these standalone concepts attract shoppers to centers and have served as incubators to develop restaurant concepts that later become brick-and-mortar tenants. The urban retail format of a food hall features a changing mix of local and often independent food-and-beverage outlets that collectively add to the center's atmosphere and uniqueness. While sometimes expensive and risky to establish in a center, restaurants helmed by well-known chefs can be significant and exclusive traffic generators for a property when successful. “Grocerants” are grocery stores that also offer prepared foods and made-to-order meals with a mix of freshness, convenience and affordability that are attractive to shoppers and, by extension, property owners. Though these formats are popular, cultivating them can be risky for property owners. Restaurants— especially new, independent restaurants—have a notoriously high failure rate. What's more, most property owners must contribute substantial capital to outfit spaces for restaurant use. One solution property owners have undertaken is to forego immediate repayment of buildout costs or to keep base rents low in exchange for an ownership stake in the restaurant, says CBRE. In that approach, the property owner receives a share of that restaurant's profit even after its initial investment is repaid, thus providing the property owner a return on its assumption of risk. “There's a move toward financial partnership rather than traditional tenant-landlord relationships,” said Melina Cordero, CBRE's head of retail research in the Americas. “That's something that landlords are going to have to be open to if they are pursuing some of these categories. In many cases, the customer draw generated by these food-and-beverage categories and the atmosphere they foster make the investment worthwhile.” dining concepts AUSTIN, TX—With food-and-beverage outlets now among the fastest-growing categories in retail centers, four emerging eatery formats are poised for significant expansion: food trucks, food halls, celebrity-chef restaurants and “grocerants,” according to a new CBRE Group Inc. report. The report highlights numerous data points that underscore the booming growth of restaurants, including the finding that total US restaurant sales surpassed grocery sales for the first time last year, according to government data, faring better since the recession than any other retail category. It also points out that, while millennials dine out more often, older generations spend more overall at restaurants. This implies more growth for restaurants as millennials age and earn more. Eric DeJernett, CCIM, senior vice president in CBRE's Austin office, tells GlobeSt.com: “Competition is fierce for quality restaurant space in Austin and landlords are paying close attention to unique concepts, best-in-class operators and quality operators with dedicated followings. One of the recent national trends is the proliferation of food trucks, which Austinites have known and loved for years. Today, we are seeing a growing trend of successful Austin food trucks evolving into brick-and-mortar operations.” The factors pointed out in the report and others collectively suggest that growth in spending at restaurants is more than a cyclical, post-recession recovery but instead a fundamental shift in American dining and spending habits. “We know that the strength of the food-and-beverage category has led to many shopping center owners seeking restaurants as anchor tenants to draw in shoppers, whereas department stores and other retailers previously filled that role,” said David Orkin , executive vice president and restaurant practice leader, CBRE. “What's particularly interesting today is that retail center owners are not only focused on traditional, proven restaurant concepts, but they are more willing than ever to embrace a broader range of emerging and, in some cases, untested concepts like food trucks which don't pay traditional rent. They are willing to take risks to compete.” CBRE enlisted its restaurant experts, led by Orkin, to identify the up-and-coming restaurant formats likely to drive the category's further expansion in retail property. These four categories offer many or all of the attributes that appeal to modern diners and shoppers: diversity, convenience, uniqueness, relative affordability and experiential focus. While food trucks don't often pay traditional rent, these standalone concepts attract shoppers to centers and have served as incubators to develop restaurant concepts that later become brick-and-mortar tenants. The urban retail format of a food hall features a changing mix of local and often independent food-and-beverage outlets that collectively add to the center's atmosphere and uniqueness. While sometimes expensive and risky to establish in a center, restaurants helmed by well-known chefs can be significant and exclusive traffic generators for a property when successful. “Grocerants” are grocery stores that also offer prepared foods and made-to-order meals with a mix of freshness, convenience and affordability that are attractive to shoppers and, by extension, property owners. Though these formats are popular, cultivating them can be risky for property owners. Restaurants— especially new, independent restaurants—have a notoriously high failure rate. What's more, most property owners must contribute substantial capital to outfit spaces for restaurant use. One solution property owners have undertaken is to forego immediate repayment of buildout costs or to keep base rents low in exchange for an ownership stake in the restaurant, says CBRE. In that approach, the property owner receives a share of that restaurant's profit even after its initial investment is repaid, thus providing the property owner a return on its assumption of risk. “There's a move toward financial partnership rather than traditional tenant-landlord relationships,” said Melina Cordero, CBRE's head of retail research in the Americas. “That's something that landlords are going to have to be open to if they are pursuing some of these categories. In many cases, the customer draw generated by these food-and-beverage categories and the atmosphere they foster make the investment worthwhile.”

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Lisa Brown

Lisa Brown is an editor for the south and west regions of GlobeSt.com. She has 25-plus years of real estate experience, with a regional PR role at Grubb & Ellis and a national communications position at MMI. Brown also spent 10 years as executive director at NAIOP San Francisco Bay Area chapter, where she led the organization to achieving its first national award honors and recognition on Capitol Hill. She has written extensively on commercial real estate topics and edited numerous pieces on the subject.

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