New tenant, new outlook
Bain deal improves Hancock?s lot, signals change in office market
The 39th floor of the John Hancock Tower
By Casey Ross
Globe Staff / May 12, 2010
In Boston?s office market, there are tenants and then there are tenants like Bain Capital.
The financial powerhouse is one of a handful of companies big enough to change Boston?s office market in a single transaction. It did so yesterday, agreeing to move to the John Hancock Tower and take seven of its vacant floors.
The deal instantly changed the fortunes of the signature office tower, transforming it from an emblem of the problems afflicting the commercial property sector into a marker of the sector?s nascent recovery.
Real estate specialists said Bain Capital?s lease is the strongest indication yet of a stabilizing market after nearly two years of growing vacancies and steadily dropping rents.
?While we still have several months of recovery ahead of us, we have begun to see a number of tenants from across industries looking for more space than they currently occupy,?? said Gil Dailey, an executive director at the real estate services firm Cushman & Wakefield, which represented both parties in the Bain deal.
Bain?s relocation, however, comes at a cost to another major landlord: Boston Properties Inc., which owns the nearby 111 Huntington Ave. building that Bain will leave next year. Executives with Boston Properties declined to comment yesterday.
Bain?s 500 Boston employees will move into floors 37 to 43 in the Hancock in the fall of 2011. The 15-year lease also includes an option for the company to take another 60,000 square feet in the 62-story building.
Neither Bain nor the Hancock?s owners, a joint venture of Normandy Real Estate Partners and Five Mile Capital Partners, would disclose Bain?s rent. But a person with knowledge of the transaction who declined to speak publicly said Bain Capital will pay in the low-$50-per-square-foot range, slightly higher than the Back Bay?s average rent of about $48.50 per square foot.
The lease is a major boost to Normandy and Five Mile, which were struggling to fill large amounts of empty space after acquiring the Hancock at a foreclosure auction for $660 million in March 2009. The prior owner, Broadway Partners of New York, defaulted on some of its loans after losing several key tenants, causing the building?s vacancy rate to surge to 15 percent, more than double what its average vacancy had been over the past 10 years.
Bain Capital?s tenancy will lower Hancock?s vacancy rate to 5 percent. A spokesman for Normandy said only two floors in the building are still available.
Commercial real estate brokers said companies large and small are looking to add space in downtown Boston, a sign that employers are gaining confidence about their pros pects for business growth.
Ameriprise Financial is looking for 140,000 square feet, a 21 percent increase over the space it currently occupies, according to commercial real estate brokers, and the law firm Pierce Atwood is looking to triple its space to 18,000 square feet. Liberty Mutual recently added 80,000 square feet at 222 Berkeley St.
Large landlords are also busier.
At International Place, the city?s largest office complex, property manager Chiofaro Co. said the number of employees in the building has increased by 2,000 during the past year. The building is also drawing more interest from potential tenants, with 13 firms taking tours of office space last month, compared with just five in April 2009.
?The level of activity from a year ago is up substantially,?? said Ted Oatis, a principal at Chiofaro. ?In a very short period, the dominant characteristic of the market has become that companies are growing.??
Evidence of that growth has not yet showed in the official numbers, with the vacancy rate at top-rated buildings in downtown Boston at 12.2 percent. At the top of the commercial market, in mid-2008, the rate was 5.2 percent.
?I?d say now we?re seeing the first signs of a stabilizing market,?? said Paul Leonard of the real estate service firm Jones Lang LaSalle. ?A lot of firms are considering taking action on new space.??
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