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Downtown’s Fixer-Upper

One of Pittsburgh’s most beautiful buildings, the Union Trust Building, is rapidly moving along with a $40 million makeover. A year ago the building, formerly a Mellon Bank Center, was virtually empty, and most observers wondered if anyone would buy and lease it. Los Angeles based Mika Realty bought the building this winter for about $40/square foot, and announced plans to bring the structure up to LEED standards and renovate the base building. Now their investment looks like the steal of the decade.

Mika Realty is giving the Union Trust Building a renovation for lead tenant Siemens Energy

With ink still drying on a 170,000 square foot long-term lease with Siemens Energy, construction is underway on the tenant buildout, plus renovations to toilet rooms, lobby, storefronts, common areas, and a new garage. Construction manager CB Richard Ellis, whose brokerage also handled the leasing, has contracted with Precision Builders for interiors, and Huckestein Mechanical, Preferred Fire Protection and Star Electric for the Siemens MEP work. The first of Siemens employees to relocate will begin occupying the fifth floor in early October.

Upgrading the building to LEED standards helped land Siemens as a lead tenant (no pun). According to CBRE’s Jeremy Kronman, Siemens worldwide corporate standards call for its facilities to be sustainable.

If you are familiar with the Flemish Gothic design of Frederick Osterling, done for Henry Frick in 1915, you probably remember that the central core of the building is open to a spectacular ceiling. Renovating a century-old building to keep up with contemporary needs and amenities for both office and retail tenants will be a challenge for architect Burt Hill.

It’s the Hospitals, Pittsburgh

Most economic observers of western PA have noticed that the regional economy is faring much better than that of the nation at large. In part that’s because we’re lucky that the regional banks (which make up a big part of our employment base too) kept their heads when everyone else was giving away money. Even our big player, PNC, has managed to stay strong while other national banks have been savaged (it’s stock closed at $71.75 on Friday-just under the 52-week high).  But the major reason Pittsburgh is thriving right now is that the economic base of the region shifted to education, technology and healthcare in the past decade or so. The hospitals in particular are churning out high-paying jobs (even with a near monopoly on services), and investing as a partner in high-value research.

 

 

 

 

The same dynamics are influencing the health (no pun) of the construction market. While news of casinos and the Pittsburgh Arena dominate the headlines, the region’s hospital construction boom continues somewhat under the radar.

 

 

As in most things, the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center is playing the lead role in construction of new space, with the $570 million Children’s Hospital heading into the home stretch of construction in spring 2009. The $90 million East Pavilion expansion at Passavant Hospital is almost one year into construction. With less fanfare, however, UPMC is also moving ahead with plans for its $100-200 million Monroeville facility, narrowing the field of potential construction managers down to P. J. Dick/Barton Malow, Gilbane and Whiting Turner. Planning continues on the renovations to the Mercy Hospital, with as much as $90 million to be invested in 2009. And the Riedbord Research and Hillman Cancer Center expansions in Shadyside, expected to cost more than $200 million, are moving towards planned 2009 contracting.

New Children's Hospital Clinical Services Building under construction in Lawrenceville (photo by Dennis Marsico)

New Children’s Hospital Clinical Services Building under construction in Lawrenceville (photo by Dennis Marsico)

Also continuing its program is the VA Pittsburgh Healthcare System, which is in the middle of a $300 million consolidation of its Highland Road hospital into the Oakland and Heinz (in Aspinwall) facilities. Having let the $45 million Heinz project to Massaro in July, the Veteran Administration is currently contracting for its Ambulatory Center in Oakland, which is expected to top $100 million as well.

 

 

 

 

 

Rendering by Astorino of the new Ambulatory Center at the VA Hospital University Drive facility in Oakland

New Ambulatory Center at the VA Medical Center University Drive facility in Oakland (rendering by Astorino)

Work is also going ahead in a couple of outlying hospital systems in the metropolitan area.

Washington Hospital is in the second year of construction on its $70 million expansion; and preliminary demolition and site work has begun on the roughly 220,000 square foot expansion of Butler Memorial Hospital. Turner was finalizing foundation, concrete and steel packages in August on the $95 million project, with contracting on the remaining packages expected to continue throughout the winter.

Catching Up On Some News

Judging from phone calls there are a couple of little items of interest to pass along:

Germand-based Flabeg USA is a manufacturer of specialty glass and glass coatings which is knocking the ball out of the park right now because of the demand for solar panel glass. They operate out of Brackenridge now but will have a new 209,000 square foot facility built in Clinton Commerce Park, by the airport in Findlay Township. Buncher Co. is the developer of the park and usually subcontracts construction themselves.

Pat Ford has resigned as the URA Director. He’s been under fire since the spring over the Grant Street Transportation Center signage controversy.

As concerns start building about whether or not we’ll hit a non-residential slowdown here next year, the institutions keep planning stuff. Grove City College is in the quiet period of another capital program, considering expansions to their science and engineering buildings, along with other program needs. They have hired Ballinger Architecture from PHiladelphia for the $50 million-ish project.

Is Energy the Next Booster Rocket for Pittsburgh?

Labor Day is back to school time, and for most business people it falls during the season they are beginning to look at plans or budgets for next year. A sizable number of  contractors run their fiscal year starting in October, so it’s a particularly forward-looking time for the construction industry.

One concern that is driving calls I’m getting to talk about next year’s planning is that the three-year ride we’re on here is coming to its end. That’s a very real possibility, especially in light of the normal ebb & flow of the business cycle. Western PA has been particularly blessed with significant private sector investment since the mid-decade, and it’s been because the new industries that have been blossoming here have taken deeper roots, not because of the common cry that Pittsburgh always lags the national market by a year or so. First of all that’s not true. We used to lead the national cycle because manufacturing lead the cycle. Our region has lagged the national economy the last 20 years or so because of the dynamics of replacing 100,000 or so jobs.

That aside the national economy will affect ours during the next few years, if only because so many Pittsburgh-based businesses now work throughout the country. So it’s possible that we won’t escape this recession entirely. The amazing and frightening inflation in fossil fuel costs have created a new hot industry in western PA that may pick up the ball when the arenas and hospitals are finally built.

The big real estate deal of the year in 2007 nationally was the Westinghouse Nuclear project in Cranberry Woods. That project was driven by Westinghouse’s off the chart growth in contracts worldwide. Their frantic pace of hiring actually slowed the project’s preconstruction because their head count kept growing 10-15% every time the program was redesigned. Lost in all the Westinghouse euphoria though was the expansion going on at Bechtel Energy, the company that competes with Westinghouse and operates the Bettis Atomic Lab in West Mifflin. Their hiring of new engineers was in the hundreds also, and Bechtel also invested millions in a new facility in Monroeville. Bechtel’s problem was scale. It’s a little like working out, losing 25 pounds, and then standing next to Brad Pitt at the singles bar. No matter how good you look, no one’s going to be paying any attention to you.

The sneaky little secret right now seems to be the pace with which companies are reacting to the high energy prices to spend capital on coal exploration, and to take advantage of the Marcellus Shale formation that runs northeast through the region. The billion dollar waste coal-to-energy plant Ray Bologna is planning in the Beech Hollow section of Robinson Township in Washington County has been quietly moving ahead, with Bechtel Energy pre-qualifying early contracts. We’ve read about Consol & CNX Energy’s successes but with less fanfare Atlas Energy has been spending millions opening up new gas wells throughout Fayette and Washington and Greene.

Marcellus Shale offers a potentially rich source of nat gas that has been attracting national players. Baker Hughes recently selected a design-build team of A. Martini & Co.  & Desmone Associates to construct an 85,000 office and shop in New Stanton. I got a call earlier this week about a Texas-based company looking at more than 100,000 square feet for a new office in the region. My guess is this is the tip of the iceberg.

Just an hour east of here you can see evidence of the expansion of wind power generation in Somerset. That’s just one of a handful of windfarms in Somerset and Cambria Counties. Another is planned next year for Fayette. Aside from the local construction jobs, that industry has grown expertise in design and construction of wind farms. Monroeville contractor Walbridge East has done a few farms in the past couple years, but is in the mix on a handful of others around the country.

It’s easy to forget the role western PA played in our nation’s energy boom a hundred years ago. But if you drive up through Butler to Oil City you get reminded that oil was discovered in PA first. We sit on some of the largest natural gas deposits in the western hemisphere, along with the aforementioned mines. And George Westinghouse has a little to do with the birth of practical electrification.

There’s an even chance that American conservation efforts and some global politics will conspire to deflate the price of oil again, or that it will stay at record high territory, or even that it will bounce up and down like CMU professor Lester Lave predicts. Whatever scenario plays out, the likelihood is that more energy-related construction is coming to western PA. My optimism comes from my experience that if I know about 2 nice projects coming to the region, there are probably 10 more I don’t know. Maybe I’m on top of things-but I wouldn’t count on it.