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Archives for April 2017

April CCIM NM Properties

April 5, 2017 by CARNM

Thanks to all of the brokers, sponsors, and guests who attended the April 2017 CCIM NM Deal Making Session & Forum and to those who shared the April 2017 CCIM NM Properties.

Over 12 million dollars of commercial real estate properties available for sale were presented from all over New Mexico.
Click here to view source PDF.
Click here to view CCIM NM Deal Making Session Thank You’s.

1.
Todd Strickland
6310 Jefferson St NE
Office
$649,030
2.
James Wheeler, CCIM
27783 I-25 W Frontage Rd, Santa Fe
Land
$1,325,357
3.
Anne Apicella
5115 Copper Ave NE,
203-207 Truman NE
Office
$722,000
4.
Nicole Rhodes &
Steve Kraemer, CCIM
1310 San Pedro Dr SE
4-Plex
$245,000
5.
Anne Apicella
523 Louisiana Blvd SE
Office
$235,000
6.
Todd Clarke, CCIM
600-604 Chama SE
Multi-Fam
$587,000
7.
James Wheeler
8201 Cerrillos Rd, Santa Fe
Land
$1,975,000
8.
Cheryl Bonner &
Chris Sioss
2320 Grande Blvd SE
 Office
$233,350
9.
Shelly Branscom, CCIM
8005 Marble Ave NE
Office
$212,000
10.
Matt Reeves &
Michael Reneau
3107 Eubank Blvd NE
Retail
$4,065,000
11.
Dave Hill, CCIM &
Steve Kraemer, CCIM
5130 Masthead NE
Office
$2,967,000
12.
Walt Arnold, CCIM, SIOR
& Larry Ilfeld, CCIM
123 S. Grand Ave, Las Vegas
No. Ridge Runner Rd, Las Vegas
1650-1654 7th St, Las Vegas
Land/Retail
$465,000
$390,000
$570,000

Filed Under: All News

El Cabo Wind Farm: Final Phase Underway

April 4, 2017 by CARNM

El Cabo Wind Farm Plans to Increase Workforce as Final Construction Phase Gets Underway

Wind turbine foundation construction at El Cabo Wind Farm in Torrance County.
Santa Fe, NM – State Land Commissioner Aubrey Dunn today announced Avangrid Renewables, the nation’s second-largest provider of wind power, is expected to begin installing turbines next week at El Cabo Wind Farm, located four miles west of Encino in Torrance County – and will be adding to its workforce.
A recent jobs report from Avangrid Renewables shows 300 temporary construction jobs have been filled, and an additional 100 workers will be hired during the month of April.
Post construction, Avangrid expects to hire 17 permanent full-time employees.
“I appreciate Avangrid Renewables selecting State Trust Lands for the site of the El Cabo Wind Farm,” said Commissioner Dunn. “Expanding wind power on Trust lands will help New Mexico meet its renewable energy goals, as well as create jobs, boost economic development, and generate revenue for public schools.”
Avangrid Renewables has already invested, or committed, $38 million to the economy by contracting with Albuquerque-based engineering, construction, and planning and design firms.  Less tangible, but still valuable contributions to the local economy include the opening of two new restaurants – Packs in Willard and Fire House in Encino.
The 87,000-acre project spans 27,000 acres of State Trust Lands and 60,000 acres of private property.  The facility will consist of 142 turbines – 10 of which are on State Trust Lands – and will produce 200 megawatts of energy, enough to power nearly 61,000 homes and businesses.  Transmission will use existing Public Service Company of New Mexico (PNM) lines to Clines Corners.
The term of the lease is 45 years and carries a $93,000 annual rental.  Since the inception of the lease, the State Land Office has earned $396,278.  Once generation begins, a percentage of annual revenue earnings associated with production will be added to the rental.
Public schools are the beneficiary of the project and rentals earned will flow to school districts across the state.
In 2007, New Mexico passed a renewable portfolio standard (RPS), requiring utilities to gener­ate 20% of their 2020 sales from renewable resources. The RPS contains a wind carve-out that requires wind to meet at least 30% of the total requirement.
For the 12 month period ending October 2016, wind energy provided nearly 11% of all in-state electricity production.
Oil, gas, and mineral production, ranching and farming, and commercial development on State Trust Lands support public schools, the New Mexico School for the Deaf, the New Mexico School for the Blind and Visually Impaired, the New Mexico Military Institute, seven universities, three hospitals, correctional facilities, water conservation projects, and public building construction and repair.
By: Aubrey Dunn, State Land Commissioner (State of New Mexico)
Contact: Kristin Haase, Assistant Commissioner for Communications
Click here to view source article.
 

Filed Under: All News

UPDATE: Lawsuit Filed Over ABQ Paid Sick Leave Ordinance Proposal

April 3, 2017 by CARNM

UPDATE: Jason Espinoza, president and CEO of the Association of Commerce and Industry, talked to Albuquerque Business First about the lawsuit after it was filed Monday.

Espinoza said the Legislature’s failure to pass the Uniform Employment Law Act is what triggered the filing of the lawsuit Monday. The proposed legislation would have kept local municipalities from passing workplace mandates and requirements, like minimum wage and sick time. It failed in committee.

The Association of Commerce and Industry, NAIOP and the New Mexico Restaurant Association filed a lawsuit Monday in state district court, calling for the Healthy Workforce Ordinance to be declared invalid, claiming it’s in violation of state law.

“If it had passed, the city would have been prohibited from enacting this ordinance and we wouldn’t have needed this lawsuit,” he said.

“At the end of the day, the loser will be employers and everyday New Mexicans looking for job opportunities,” he said of the proposal, which he describes as fringe.

Employees would see a reduction in benefits and employers, big and small, would be hit with compliant and administrative costs, Espinoza argues.

“This ordinance does not discriminate in who it’s going to harm,” he said.

A lawsuit was filed Monday seeking to keep a proposed ordinance asking voters if Albuquerque employers should be required to offer paid sick leave from appearing on ballots this fall.

The Association of Commerce and Industry, NAIOP and the New Mexico Restaurant Association filed the lawsuit Monday in state district court, calling for the ordinance, called the Healthy Workforce Ordinance, to be declared invalid, claiming it’s in violation of state law. The lawsuit is also seeking to have the 2012 amendments to the Albuquerque minimum wage ordinance declared unenforceable. The lawsuit names the city of Albuquerque and the Albuquerque City Council as defendants.

The lawsuit argues the ballot measures violate a section of the New Mexico constitution that deals with “logrolling.”

“Logrolling is the presentation of double or multiple propositions to the voters with no chance to vote on the separate question so that unpopular, unworkable or extreme laws will be voted on, with a potentially popular idea,” reads the lawsuit. “Logrolling is criticized because it is a form of voter fraud.”

Healthy Workforce Ordinance Lawsuit by Chris on Scribd

The plaintiffs argue that if the ordinance passes, their members would suffer “significant economic harm.”

In September, a judge ruled the proposed paid sick leave ordinance, also called Healthy Workforce ABQ, would not appear on the November 2016 ballot, pushing the ballot measure to appear in the Albuquerque municipal election on Oct. 3. According to the proposed ordinance’s original language, employers could face civil penalties of $500 per employee if caught in violation.

In a statement, the city’s legal staff said: “This proposal was not a [Mayor Richard J.] Berry administration, or city, initiative. It was interest-group-initiated as allowed by the city charter. The city will take whatever action the court orders in this case.”

At issue was whether the proposal needed to be printed in full or whether a summary of the ordinance would suffice before voters, Albuquerque Business First reported. A judge in the Second Judicial District Court agreed with Albuquerque’s city attorney, who argued the proposal must appear in full text, not just a summary.

Proponents of the ordinance included El Centro de Igualdad y Derechos, the New Mexico Center on Law and Poverty, OLÉ, Strong Families, SouthWest Organizing Project and other community organizations. Supporters said paid sick leave would create a healthier workforce and a better local economy. Opponents said many employers already offer paid sick leave in the form of paid time off, and the proposal would be too costly to enforce.

“Our issue has never been about paid sick leave,” said Lynne Andersen, president of NAIOP New Mexico, to Business First in September. “Many of my members offer paid sick leave through paid time off. This has been about this ordinance and what it means. Because frankly none of them want to track sick leave because it’s a pain in the neck.”

By: Christopher Ortiz (Albuquerque Business First)

Click here to view source article.

Filed Under: All News

Las Estancias Benefits Long-Underserved Area

April 3, 2017 by CARNM

ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — Las Estancias, the massive mixed-used commercial development in the South Valley, is expecting to welcome more newcomers this year.
Once considered an underserved trade area in need of retail, medical, entertainment, banks and other business services, Las Estancias so far has generated 150,000 square feet of new construction at the site near Rio Bravo and Coors SW. There are currently 14 retailers providing more than 300 jobs, according to the office of County Commissioner Steven Michael Quezada. And more jobs are on the horizon with other tenants in various stages of development.
Randall Parish, a broker with NAI Maestas & Ward who represents Las Estancias, told the Journal that a name brand anchor has signed a letter of intent for at least an additional 20,000 square feet of space.
Shopping center representatives also are negotiating leases with three national chains, and have already inked deals with regional names like Dion’s Pizza, Sushi King, New Mexico Bank & Trust, Nusenda, and Lovelace and Presbyterian health systems, which have either opened for business or will very soon.
mb10_jd_03apr_2lasestancias

T-Mobile is one of a number of retail outlets that have found a home at the Las Estancias development near Coors and Rio Bravo SW. (Adolphe Pierre-Louis/Albuquerque Journal)

Las Estancias could have as much as 550,000 square feet of retail and dozens of businesses at full build-out on the 80-acre site. Parish estimated it would be complete in two to three years.
Target area for development

mb10_jd_03apr_1lasestancias

The Starbucks at Las Estancias near Coors and Rio Bravo SW is one of the most popular tenants at the new development. (Adolphe Pierre-Louis/Albuquerque Journal)

The shopping center sits in a trade area with 140,000 people living within a five-mile radius. But compared to extremely active trade areas like Uptown and Cottonwood, there is a dearth of retail in the South Valley submarket – an area that stretches east to Interstate 25 and is bounded on the north by Bridge east of the river and by Central west of the river. That area today has 9 square feet of retail space per person compared to the city average of 45 square feet per person.
The upshot: Many South Valley residents have been driving miles to get to some of their favorite eateries and retailers.
“Just the fact that there is a movie theater is amazing. It’s a bummer to leave the area,” Quezada said. “And Starbucks, they said they would never open in the South Valley. It’s just a sign that things are changing here.”
Starbucks opened at the shopping center earlier this year; Carmike Cinemas opened a movie theater there in 2015.
Quezada, a lifelong resident of the South Valley, is excited about what Las Estancias means for his community.
“You know (South Valley residents) actually do eat. You know? We do buy clothes,” says Quezada. “We deserve the same services that other areas of town get.”
According to a trade area analysis, homeownership within three miles of Las Estancias is 13.5 percent higher than the national average, creating more expendable income for DIYers looking to do home fix-up projects or keeping their cars on the road longer.
The South Valley “is one of our client’s target areas” for retail expansion, said Jeff Martinez, a broker with the Allen Sigmon Real Estate Group, who represents NAPA Auto Parts.
NAPA is eyeing retail centers like Las Estancias, among others on the West Side, Martinez said.
Steadily adding tenants
A Walmart Supercenter adjacent to Las Estancias was the first big-box pioneer to open up in the South Valley, lighting the fuse for more commercial activity when it opened a decade ago, Parish said. Its arrival caught the eyes of Albuquerque developers Steve Maestas and Mike Mechenbier, the investors behind Las Estancias.
But by the time Las Estancias was approved for development in 2008, the recession had begun and some retailers that had signed on quickly called off plans. One was Mervyn’s, which has since gone out of business.
It took until 2013 for Las Estancias to finally broke ground, and it has been steadily adding tenants, such as Carmike Cinemas, the first such movie theater in the South Valley in many years and the second IMAX theater in Albuquerque.
Some of the restaurants that have since opened are hoping to catch moviegoers wanting to grab a bite to eat before or after the shows at the 12-screen cinema, said Parish.
mb00_jd_03apr_lasestanciascenterThe Walmart near Las Estancias has 10,000-plus shoppers each week, generating nearly $90 million in annual sales, according to Parish. Noncompeting businesses, such as speciality retailers, are eager for spillover from that, said Parish. Once a specific category of retailer comes to an area – a cellphone provider, for instance – others are sure to follow. “The dominoes start to fall,” with competitors vying for business space and a piece of the retail action, Parish said.
Local retailers and restaurants, he said, are also a large part of the overall plan for Las Estancias.
“The area has really grown over the last 10 years,” Dion’s CEO Mark Herman told the Journal. “And the community around the store has been very supportive.”
He said sales at the Las Estancias location are better than expected.
Another plan for sustained success at Las Estancias is adapting to the changing retail landscape. That means offering a more experiential location rather than a center purely designed for retail.
The IMAX theater is part of that. Another is a large community space in the middle of the development that Parish said could be used for community events ranging from car shows to flea markets and “anything that the community wants.”
He said there will most likely also be space for “micro-retailers” – small local businesses that might not have the capital to rent one of the suites. “If you are a small chocolatier in the South Valley, or you make homemade breads, or you are a local folk artist, these are spaces that are affordable,” Parish said.
The rent for these boxes will be in the hundreds rather than the thousands.
“You can be in the middle of a major retail area. You can be at a hub with large national retailers. So far as I know, this will be the only shopping center in Albuquerque that offers that,” he said.
Much-needed health care
Healthcare tenants have also been lining up.

mb10_jd_03apr_2lasestancias

Lovelace Medical Group is leasing space in a building that also includes a newly opened physical therapy clinic. (Adolphe Pierre-Louis/Albuquerque Journal)

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Lovelace Medical Group said it recently opened in the center as part of an effort to beef up access to primary care providers in the South Valley.
“We are thrilled,” site manager Jackie Sanchez said about the new clinic. “This has been a long time coming, and we’re so happy to finally have it open and meet the needs of the community.”
Lovelace is leasing 9,000 square feet of space in a 16,000-square-foot freestanding building built by Wilger Construction that also includes a newly opened physical therapy clinic.
Donald Sanchez, owner of Paradigm Physical Therapy, is enthusiastic about business prospects at Las Estancias. Paradigm soon will take over a 4,500-square-foot space next to the Lovelace clinic, its fourth location in central New Mexico.
“We will break 50 employees (companywide) with this location,” said Sanchez, adding that six to eight full-time staffers will be working at the new location.
The Hartman + Majewski Design Group designed the Lovelace space, which includes a spacious reception area, eight primary care and five obstetrical exam rooms, an ultrasound room, an on-site lab and two draw stations. The clinic cost more than $1 million to build.

The Rio at Las Estancias, a long-term care and rehabilitation center, opened in 2014. The development has drawn several other medical and health-related businesses. (Adolphe Pierre-Louis/Albuquerque Journal)

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Presbyterian’s clinic on Isleta Boulevard has outgrown its current location and will move to 3630 Las Estancias to better meet the needs of existing patients and future ones, said Dr. Angela Gallegos-Macias, medical director of Presbyterian Medical Group on Isleta. Construction on the new clinic could begin this summer, she said, with opening by fall 2018.
The health care tenant mix also includes The Rio at Las Estancias, a 65,000-square-foot long-term care and rehabilitation center, which opened in 2014.
And Parish expects interest from dental clinics, chiropractors, and opticians.
By: Steve Sinovic and Taylor Hood (Albuquerque Journal)
Click here to view source article.
 
 

Filed Under: All News

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