Students from Cal's Fisher Center for Real Estate and Urban Economics and a handful of SIOR docents recently took a bus tour of some of the area's projects in varying stages of construction.
Those in the know reveal that the best way to get a these projects approved is to change the conversation around creative affordable housing development.
Developers are poised to take advantage of the lack of inventory in the near future and with the market tightening, rents may start to increase and distribution buildings will likely break ground, McGee says in this <b>EXCLUSIVE</b>.
Since the park opened, newly developed office space and increased occupancy in the area around Klyde Warren Park has reached upwards of 1.3 million square feet, with many companies paying premium rents.