Category: Construction news

Commercial Real Estate Enthusiasm

Burns & Scalo Real Estate hosted a brokers luncheon Tuesday and its president, Jim Scalo, was exceptionally upbeat about the next few years. Scalo characterized 2016-2017 as slow years for transactions and decisions because of uncertainty surrounding the election and the ensuing Trump administration. Citing the Tax Cuts and Jobs Act that was passed in late 2017, Scalo explained that he had seen a dramatic upswing in activity since the start of 2018, both in terms of leasing and interest. His forecast was for a strong year for corporate and technology users in 2018, followed by at least two more great years. With the rapid pace of change in Pittsburgh’s economy, Scalo was reluctant to look beyond 2020, but he made it clear that there was no reason to expect a slowdown in 2021 or beyond.

Burns & Scalo is currently working to develop a 150,000 sq. ft. Class A Riviera office building in the Oakland/Pittsburgh Technology Center riverfront. Construction is scheduled for later this year, although the proposed riverfront zoning changes are a potential drag on the project. Burns & Scalo also plans to start a spec office in Robinson at its Boardwalk site, as well as Beacon II at the Abele Business Park in South Fayette.

Brokers at the luncheon echoed the enthusiasm Scalo had. Industrial brokers were beaming about deals pending in the Wheeling-to-Washington corridor and the airport area. One broker talked about the space at Nova Place, which was once thought to be a white elephant on the North Side, becoming scarce. With rents in the high $20s/sq. ft., Nova Place has succeeded in re-branding itself as a tech hub in high demand.

nova place int lobby
Nova Place’s main concourse. Photo courtesy Perkins Eastman.

In project news, Mistick Construction was selected for the 183-unit, $30 million Solana at Cranberry project. CMU selected Landau Building Co. for the $3.5 million Warner Hall renovation. PJ Dick has started construction on the $6-7 million renovation of the former Cadillac dealership at Craft Place and the Boulevard in Oakland into offices. The developer, Walnut Capital, is said to have a single user for the project. St. Vincent University finalized its list of contractors for its $14 million library project. Jendoco, Landau, Mascaro, Massaro, PJ Dick, and Poole Anderson will be asked to propose on the project.

Starting to Heat Up in 2018

Bid boards have gotten very full very quickly for Pittsburgh contractors. Much of the work on the streets is small private stuff but there are a few meaty projects, with the prospects of some big projects (UPMC Presbyterian and Shadyside Towers, CMU Skibo Hall, $75 million Altoona High) coming out within the next month or so. Among the projects being bid, the $43 million City’s Edge Apartments in the Lower Hill have gone out for competitive GMP proposals to PJ Dick, Rycon, Mosites.

The Murdoch Building, a 95,000 square foot office and retail building being built by Mascaro, broke ground this month. Fairchance Construction is about to start work on a 138,000 square foot expansion of COE Distributing at the Franklin Commercial Park in Fayette County, being developed by J D & D Enterprises. Dick Building Co. has started work on a new 42,000 square foot Rahal Land Rover/Jaguar dealership in North Strabane Twp. outside Washington PA.

Bobby Rahal Land Rover Jaguar building pad sitework
Dick Building has started sitework on Rahal Land Rover/Jaguar in Washington, PA.

In economic news, the Census Bureau reported that GDP growth was only 2.6% in the fourth quarter, a mild disappointment compared to expectations. For perspective, however, that pace of growth (which was the annual rate too) is an improvement over 2016 and about what could be realistically expected given the shortage of workers. It’s also worth noting that this is the first of three estimates. By the time the final estimate is reached in 2 months, the final figure may hit the 3% that economists expected.

us annual gdp

2017 Wrap-Up

The Pittsburgh Homebuilding Report released its year-end 2017 results for new construction in the six-county metropolitan Pittsburgh market. While the year unfolded mostly as forecast, there were a few noteworthy deviations.

Single-family housing construction was up compared to 2016 but the gains were in attached products, like townhomes and quads. Permits for attached homes jumped more than 25 percent to 1,035 units. Starts for single-family detached homes actually declined by 6.3 percent, to 1,971 homes under construction. In contrast to the national trend, permits for new apartments also increased last year. New apartment construction activity was expected to slow in 2017 but permits for new units increased by 11 percent, to 2,368 units.

Another trend that continued more strongly in 2017 was the migration to the city. Permits for new construction in Pittsburgh proper reached 1,714, or roughly one-third of the total construction for the entire metropolitan statistical area.

Topmuni2017-4

In another measure of the economy, job growth returned to Pittsburgh during 2017. Hiring grew by an average of 11,625 jobs monthly in 2017; however, that average is well below the current trend. Job creation increased steadily throughout the year, with the monthly average reaching 16,000 jobs in the fourth quarter. In fact, December’s job growth of 19,300 was the highest year-over-year in 2017. Although there have been later revisions that deflated the preliminary jobs numbers in several of the most recent years, the consistent strength of employment gains in 2017 suggests that the trend of flat employment changed significantly last year.

Project news is light at this time of year but the hospital market continues to expand. Rycon Construction was selected as CM for the first of the AHN neighborhood hospitals in Greensburg. Turner Construction is bidding early packages and expects to release the main specialty contractors bids in mid-February for the $90 million UMPC Hamot tower in Erie. UPMC will be interviewing a handful of architects for its $700 million Transplant and Heart Hospital in Oakland (along with the Hillman/Shadyside expansion) next week, with RFP’s for construction management to follow within the month.

Reindustrialization & Amazon

This morning Amazon announced the 20 cities that had made the first cut down from the 238 submissions. Read one local newspaper story about the news. There was a lot of excitement, as you might expect, about the announcement but it’s worth remembering that there are 19 other cities still in the running, including every city handicapped to have had an advantage over Pittsburgh from the start.

The news reminded me of a comment a gas industry executive made during the research for a recent BreakingGround article. He was grousing about all the press for the Amazon HQ2 bid and scoffed at the idea of 50,000 added jobs over the next 10-15 years. By the time the natural gas and chemical industry built out, he said, there would be 100,000 new jobs added in that sector.

That executive might have been exaggerating a little but it’s becoming clearer that the industrial sector is the big reason we’re seeing tight labor conditions ahead of what will be a bigger boom in the next two or three years. With most of the research for 2017 complete, we’ve tracked $4.37 billion in commercial/non-residential contracting. Some $2.37 billion of that total was in the industrial market. While there were a few big commercial warehouses in that number, the lion’s share of the industrial starts came from manufacturing, processing and power generation. This isn’t a one-year phenomenon. The industrial total for 2016 was $1.85 billion; and in 2015, it was $770 million. Even the relatively small total in 2014 – $492 million – dwarfs the total of any other sector during those four years.

There are a number of the mega projects – like Shell or the combined-cycle power plants – that have garnered headlines and make up big chunks of the dollars spent, but there has also been a steady stream of smaller, regionally-focused projects started. Within the past couple of months, for example, Al. Neyer started a 75,000 square foot addition to Knepper Press in Clinton Commerce Park. Hallstrom Construction is working on a 180,000 square foot addition to the New Stanton warehouse for DeLallo Foods.  These are local companies making stuff and doing stuff here. These are project that add to the employment base too.

Think back to the P.R. of the gas industry when the Marcellus Shale play started ten years ago. The payoff, they said, would be in the boom in manufacturing that would follow the exploration. This reindustrialization is starting to become bricks and mortar (or concrete and steel). Along with the construction and jobs, comes a fundamental change in the way business decisions are made. Manufacturers think in terms of the return on their assets. An asset-based economy tends to be focused on long-term trends instead of the next quarter’s results. That usually leads to better decisions for the health of the regional economy. You can read an article on the subject in the Jan/Feb BreakingGround (it’s on p. 52).

What’s going on in the technology transfer for robotics, information technology, AI and big data is an incredible opportunity for transformation of Pittsburgh’s economy. There’s an equally transformative reindustrialization trend. In the race to see which sector takes the economy higher, the winner is Pittsburgh.

Finishing 2017 On a Roll

By mid-December the bidding calendar is usually pretty blank most years. The volume of year-end activity isn’t significantly higher in 2017 but, with what we know is in the hopper, there are a number of plum opportunities on the streets.

On the small but interesting side, bids are being taken from A. Martini & Co., Franjo and Rycon for the 20,000 square foot TI for Delphi Automotive in RIDC Park in O’Hara. Based upon similar fit-outs of their autonomous vehicle competitors, this project won’t be a multi-million job for the winner; but with Delphi’s growth plans, it won’t hurt to get positioned as their contractor. Franjo parlayed a couple small projects for Uber into tens of millions in construction over the past couple years.

Poole Anderson, Franjo and BRIDGES are among the contractors pricing the $30 million Crossings senior living community Smith Packett has planned for Indiana Township. The project has 154 units of independent and assisted living, plus 40 memory care beds. A similar project, the Salina of Cranberry, is being budgeted at the Village of Cranberry Woods. That senior community is being developed by the Formation Group from Atlanta. When these two projects start construction, some $250 million in senior living apartments will be underway in metro Pittsburgh

crossings-at-west-shore-rendering-full-size
Rendering of The Crossings at West Shore, a Smith-Packett project similar to that in Indiana Twp.

Another combined cycle power plant is nearing construction in the region. The 1,000 MW, $600 million Renaissance Energy Center will be built by APV at the Hatfield’s Ferry site near Carmichaels in Greene County. Siemens is reported to be the EPC on the project. In the commercial sector, the $13 million Tryp Hotel is close to starting construction. Franjo Construction is the contractor on the adaptive re-use of the former Washington Elementary on 40th Street.

AHN has narrowed the competition for its new Wexford hospital to Turner, Massaro/Gilbane and Rycon/Yates. A decision is expected before the holidays.

The Power Plants Are Booming Too

A lot has been made about the boom in hospital construction over the past month (and for good reason). It’s worth noting that very quietly the energy and power industries have been in the midst of a boom of similar proportions. Work is underway at the new $893 million Hickory Run Energy Center outside New Castle, a combined-cycle power plant being developed by a consortium led by Tyr Energy, with Kiewitt Power Constructors as the EPC. Kiewitt is also the EPC on the CPV 1050MW combined-cycle plant located outside Johnstown, a $700 million gas-fired plant that should be under construction for the next 2 years. Work should wrap up in 2018 on 2 other plants, the $780 million Tenaska Energy project in Westmoreland County and the $900 million Lordstown plant in OH. The Lordstown project is phase one of two. Not far from Lordstown, near Wellsville, a $1.1 billion combined-cycle plant is going through the final planning stages. That plant is known as the South Field Energy Station.

All of these projects are a result of the economics and proximity to the shale gas in the Appalachian region. That plentiful supply is also one of the reasons Shell is building its cracker in Monaca. To meet the ethane demands of the petrochemical industry, midstream developers are underway with 2 more gas processing plants near Burgettstown. Energy Transfer Partners is about a year into the $1.5 billion Revolution plant and MarkWest should soon start construction on the Harmon Creek plant, which should run at least $500 million. While little is written about these projects, the demands for labor are significant. Similar gas processing plants built over the past decade have consumed more than 100 electricians and 200 steamfitters. Those are big numbers in a region with a tight labor market.

Monday AM News

While the bidding market is quiet ahead of the holiday, the hospital market is making some noise. AHN has been moving ahead with several of its cancer centers. The most recent to be lined up is the center planned for the Forbes Regional campus in Monroeville. Rycon Construction was awarded that 60,000 sq. ft., $20 million facility.  PJ Dick was selected to build a smaller facility, a 30,000 sq. ft. cancer center, at the St. Vincent campus in Erie. AHN has also issued the RFP for its new $200 million+ hospital in Pine Township, adjacent to the Wexford Wellness Pavilion. Proposing on that project are Mascaro/PJ Dick, Massaro/Gilbane, Turner, Whiting-Turner and Rycon/Yates.

dt.common.streams.StreamServer
Rendering of AHN’s new 160-bed hospital in Wexford.

South of Pittsburgh, WVUH awarded a contract to Mosites Construction for the $6 million fitout of the 8th floor at the Ruby Hospital Tower. In non-hospital news, CMU is taking proposals from Jendoco, Landau, Mascaro, PJ Dick and Rycon on renovations to Posner Hall and Warner Hall. The projects combined will be roughly $22 million. Trammel Crow broke ground on the $60 million Station Square Apartments. The 310-unit complex will be built by Rycon Construction. Bids will be taken from A. Martini & Co., Landau, Nello, Volpatt and Waller Construction on a renovation of First Presbyterian Church in Washington, PA.

Hospitals, Again

Earlier this afternoon UPMC announced its own major capital program. The centerpiece of the $2 billion expansion will be the UPMC Heart and Transplant Hospital at Presbyterian, a 620-bed, 940,000 sq. ft. tower in the heart of Oakland, which could run $1 billion or more. UPMC also announced an expansion of the Hillman Cancer Center at UPMC Shadyside. That will be a 240,000 sq. ft. patient tower and 160,000 sq. ft. outpatient facility, likely a $250-300 million project. The final project announced was the UPMC Vision & Rehabilitation Hospital at Mercy, a 300,000 sq. ft., $200 million new facility. IKM, CJL Engineering and Mascaro Construction are reported to be working on the design/constructibility of this hospital. These projects are in addition to the $200 million+/- UPMC South Hills facility and the expansion of Children’s Hospital, neither of which has timetables announced.
What wasn’t announced was a renovation of the Ford Motor Building in Shadyside, which the Post-Gazette and Business Times reported as part of UPMC’s plan earlier this week. That building is not part of UPMC’s plan but is being studied by the University of Pittsburgh for possible use.
dt.common.streams.StreamServer (1)
UPMC’s new 300,000 sq. ft. Vision Hospital at Mercy,
Coupled with AHN’s announcements, the boom in healthcare construction means that there will likely be at least 4 hospital projects – and as many as 6 – over $150-200 million under construction in 2019.

CMU and Other Updates

CMU and RIDC made an announcement yesterday that the Advanced Robotics for Manufacturing Institute and the Manufacturing Futures Initiative would take about 60,000 square feet of the 94,000 square foot first building at the Mill 19 building at Hazelwood Green. Mill 19 is the creative re-use of the last remaining mill structure at the former J & L Steel works (now also formerly known as Almono). This lease wasn’t exactly a well-kept secret but it is one more piece of economic good news for Pittsburgh, especially given that ARM’s main goal is to spin out technology that will result in other new companies. Construction of the core and shell for the building will be done by Turner Construction, which is also doing preconstruction for the CMU tenant improvements.

dt.common.streams.StreamServer
Rendering of Mill 19 by MSR/Ten X Ten/R3A

In Lawrenceville a similarly-named project is getting underway. PJ Dick is starting construction on Mill 41, a 75,000 square foot office building being developed by Fort Willow on the site of a former mill.  At the Shell plant in Monaca, Bechtel awarded Turner Construction the $9-10 million rail buildings package that bid last spring. One week after AHN announced its major capital program, the hospital system is taking proposals from Graziano, Jendoco, Landau, Rycon and Turner for a 60,000 square foot, $20 million cancer center at the Forbes Regional campus in Monroeville.

The Wave is Building

This morning’s announcement from Allegheny Health Network is but the latest in a string of major construction project announcements over the past few months. Unlike some of the other, however, the AHN projects should be moving quickly. For contractors trying to maintain capacity (and build backlog) ahead of the growing wave of construction coming in 2018 and beyond, that’s welcome news.

The details: a new 160-bed hospital will be built in Pine Township next to the Highmark Wellness Pavilion in Wexford. That project, which should run $300 million, is slated to start in mid-2018. AHN expects to put out RFP’s for design and construction management within a few weeks. AHN also announced a partnership with Emerus, a Dallas-based developer/operator of “micro-hospitals” to build community hospitals throughout the AHN footprint. There will be four such micro-hospitals initially, one each in the north, south, east, and west suburbs. In other similar markets, Emerus facilities have been in the 40,000 square foot range.

dt.common.streams.StreamServer
Rendering of the new 160-bed hospital in Pine Twp. by Allegheny Health Network.

The AHN program amounts to a $700 million expansion of its facilities. Some of that expansion includes projects already awarded, including the new cancer center in Butler, which was awarded to the design/build team of Mascaro and Stantec.

Another wave that is building is the follow on to Shell’s cracker, under construction in Beaver County. Multiple plastics companies have been in the market looking for sites for new manufacturing plants of between 60,000 sq. ft. and 150,000 sq. ft. At Starpointe, near Burgettstown, Scannell Properties has begun work on a 507,000 sq. ft. distribution center, which is rumored to be for Shell. ARCO/Murray National Construction is building that facility. In other logistics news, Al. Neyer has begun construction of a 220,000 sq. ft. Class A distribution center in Jackson Township near Zelienople and a major retailer is reported to be looking for a site for a million sq. ft. distribution center in Western PA.

In other project news, Carnegie Library of Pittsburgh awarded a contract to Massaro Corporation for its $3 million Carrick Branch. Landau Building Co. was selected by WVUH for the $3 million Ruby Hospital OR. PennDOT awarded Beaver Excavating an $87 million contract for the next phase of the Southern Beltway.