Versus Partners and Clarion Partners are building this 702K building in GreenParke at Airwest Business Park, part of a new wave of construction.
INDIANAPOLIS—The past year has been a remarkable one for the Indianapolis region’s industrial market. In late 2015, the vacancy rate was at an already-low 5.0%, and since then it fell another 140 bps to just 3.6%, according to a new report from Cushman & Wakefield. That steep decline came after a construction boom that saw developers complete millions of square feet of new buildings, mostly in response to intense demand from distributors and warehouse users. And now that users have absorbed much of that space, developers have already started another round of new construction.
“They have a little more faith since they’ve seen one round of construction be successful,” Trevor Kirsch, research analyst, tells GlobeSt.com. What makes the region especially attractive is that due to an intense demand for distribution space, Indianapolis saw a great deal of absorption even during the depths of the recession. That has given it a reputation for resilience, so investors now see it as a good bet for both the near future and the long term. “It seems like a wise place to put capital.”