Economic Development Update for Crystal City - Arlingtonva

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Economic Development Update for Crystal City AED Presentation to CCCRC June 27, 2016

Arlington’s Commercial Office Vacancy Rate

Vacancy Rate: 2012-2015 25%

21.7% ∆ = 1.6% 20%

20.1%

15%

12.6% 12.6% 10%

1Q12 2Q12 3Q12 4Q12 1Q13 2Q13 3Q13 4Q13 1Q14 2Q14 3Q14 4Q14 1Q15 2Q15 3Q15 4Q15

Source: CoStar, AED

2

Why did the office vacancy rate climb?

BRAC

Regional Economy

Space Utilization

Increased Competition

Old and New

3

Crystal City Office Market Trends 300,000

Quarterly Office Net Absorption and Vacancy Rates in Crystal City, 1Q2011 to QTD

30.00%

200,000

25.00%

100,000 20.00%

0

15.00%

-100,000 -200,000

10.00%

-300,000 5.00%

-400,000 -500,000

2011 Q1

2011 Q3

2012 Q1

2012 Q3

2013 Q1

2013 Q3

Net Absorption Source: CoStar, AED

2014 Q1

2014 Q3

2015 Q1

2015 Q3

2016 Q1

0.00%

Vacancy Rate 4

Selected Office Market Availability in Crystal City Building Address

Building Name

Available SF

2511 Jefferson Davis Hwy 2200 Crystal Dr 1750 Crystal Dr 3550 S Clark St 1400 Crystal Dr 1225 S Clark St 241 18th St S 2733 Crystal Dr 1550 Crystal Dr 2011 Crystal Dr 2451 Crystal Dr 1401 S Clark St 2450 Crystal Dr 2461 S Clark St 2001 Jefferson Davis Hwy 1235 S Clark St 2900 Crystal Dr 2611 Jefferson Davis Hwy

Presidential Tower Crystal Plaza 4 Crystal Square 3 National Gateway II 1400 Crystal Crystal Gateway 2 Crystal Square 4 Two Potomac Yard - North Tower Crystal Square 2 Crystal Park One Crystal Park Five Jefferson Plaza Century One at Century Center Century Two at Century Center Crystal Plaza 1 Crystal Gateway 1 Potomac Gateway South Airport Plaza 2

278,720 252,974 240,702 193,678 183,914 167,645 155,665 155,116 142,917 140,544 120,060 109,826 101,941 89,456 85,260 81,589 80,883 78,890 5

Multifamily Deliveries in Arlington 2,500

2,000

1,449 = 10-year average of Units Delivered Residential Units

1,500

Apartment Condo 1,000

500

-

Source: AED

1990 1991 1992 1993 1994 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015

6

Crystal City Multifamily Apartment Market Trends Crystal City MF Apt Net Absorption and Vacancy Rate, 1Q2011 to QTD 500

7.00%

507 net apartments absorbed since 2011

400

6.00%

300

5.00%

200

4.00%

100

3.00%

0

2.00%

-100

1.00%

-200

2011 Q1

2011 Q3

2012 Q1

2012 Q3

2013 Q1

2013 Q3

Net Absorption Source: Costar, AED

2014 Q1

2014 Q3

2015 Q1

2015 Q3

2016 Q1

0.00%

Vacancy Rate 7

Arlington’s Economic Development Strategy A Strategy on Focused Diversification and Target Industries

1. Education IT 2. Healthcare IT 3. Cybersecurity 4. Data Analytics 5. Energy

8

Arlington’s Economic Development Strategy

FY 2016 Outcome

42

CLOSED and Announced Deals

34 Deals with Business Investment Group (“BIG”) Assist

9,300

JOBS New or Retained

8,400 Jobs with BIG Assist Source: AED, CoStar Fiscal Year 2016 YTD (July 1, 2015 - Feb. 22, 2016)

3 of 34

Received INCENTIVES

FT of 1,840,000 SQ Real Estate

1,610,000 SQ FT with BIG Assist 9

Crystal City Economic Development Highlights • Crystal City is becoming an emerging tech hub with 1776, Eastern Foundry, Tech Shop & WeLive/WeWork • German grocer LIDL establishes North American headquarters acquiring over 200,000 square feet at National Gateway I • The DoD renews 912,000 square feet in the Polk and Taylor buildings • Retention & expansion of the U.S. Marshals Service occupying over 300,000 square feet • Resurgence of non-profits with new move-ins including American Diabetes Association, Association for Professionals in Infections Control, Society of Manufacturers and Affiliates, American Intellectual Property Law Association

Redevelopment and Reinvestment Moving Forward Redevelopment Economics and Community Benefits • Even older, vacant buildings have a value, or going-in basis • The value of the existing asset essentially becomes the residual land value under a redevelopment scenario • Additional density can “write down” that residual land value to a number that is supportable financially • Future redevelopment opportunities should consider the impact of the cost of extraordinary community benefits on project viability

Financially supportable land values at $50/FAR SF

Existing asset considered for redevelopment has value of $200/SF

Additional density of X4 required to write down going-in basis to market supported level

Under this scenario, the project can not support additional community benefit costs

Strategic Public Investments FY 2015 FY 2016 FY 2016 ACTUAL ADOPTED REESTIMATE ADJUSTED BALANCE, JULY 1 Construction Reserve Reserve

$6,828,6 94 -

$5,997,626

$8,915,876 $10,823,046 450,000

6,828,694

350,000 ,347,626 6

350,000 ,265,876 9

3,332,465

3,096,740

4,207,170

TOTAL BALANCE

FY 2017 PROPOSED

,273,046 11

REVENUES Tax Increment Area

4,812,420

State Transportation Grant Revenues

50,225

-

-

NVTC Revenues1

84,599

-

-

TOTAL REVENUES

4,812,420 3,467,289

3,096,740

4,207,170

TOTAL REVENUES & BALANCE

16,085,466 10,295,983 9,444,366

13,473,046

EXPENSES Capital Projects - Current Year

4,812,420 1,030,107

3,096,740

2,000,000

Capital Projects - Carry-Over

,787,580 -

431,341

Contingency TOTAL EXPENSES

860,000 1,030,107

352,808 3,880,889

200,000 2,200,000

8,915,876

5,213,477

10,823,046

350,000 $9,265,876

350,000 $5,563,477

450,000 $11,273,04 6

BALANCE, JUNE 30 Construction Reserve

9,460,000

6,125,466

Reserve 2 TOTAL BALANCE

3

-

500,000 $6,625,466

Redevelopment and Reinvestment Moving Forward

Flexibility on building use and footprints

Supporting adaptive reuse/ innovation

Continue to invest in ground plane/retail

Maximizing investment opportunities

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