Property Management from The Sundance Company

As a property owner, you must think about maximizing the value of your asset. And so do we. Our more than 30 years of Asset Administration experience in the Boise Valley including Boise, Meridian, and Nampa allows The Sundance Company to offer you a high-quality alternative approach to traditional Property Management services. For instance, The Sundance Company and its Asset Administrative team will:

  • Forecast the needs of the property
  • Help to reduce your interest costs and loan fees
  • Assist in reducing renewal costs
  • Provide opportunities for reduced insurance premiums
  • Offer significant operating expense savings
  • Understand owners’ objectives and tailor our Asset Management Plan to your performance expectations and building needs
  • Advise on financing, long-term planning, market analysis and capital forecasting
  • Allow you to focus on your core business objectives while we help reduce operating, legal and accounting costs
  • Perform high-quality services such as:
    o Full financial and reporting services
    o Security/fire/safety programs
    o Supervision and training of personnel
    o Contract administration
    o Standard operating procedures manuals
    o Building operations and maintenance
    o Customer and tenant services
    o Lease administration and management
    o Ongoing building and safety inspection programs
    o Annual customer and tenant surveys

About The Sundance Company
Established in 1976, The Sundance Company has the experience to help you with your commercial real estate needs in Boise, Meridian, Nampa, and the greater Treasure Valley. If your requirements include property management, leasing, real estate development, project planning, construction or space planning then look to us. The Sundance Company has more than 1.5 million square feet of office and industrial space available in prime Boise and Meridian locations. More information is available at www.sundanceco.com or 208.322.7300.

It’s All About The Images

About The Sundance Company
Established in 1976, The Sundance Company has the experience to help you with your commercial real estate needs in Boise, Meridian, Nampa, and the greater Treasure Valley. If your requirements include property management, leasing, real estate development, project planning, construction or space planning then look to us. The Sundance Company has more than 1.5 million square feet of office and industrial space available in prime Boise and Meridian locations. More information is available at www.sundanceco.com or 208.322.7300.

Recent Transactions from The Sundance Company

The Sundance Company is pleased to announce the following commercial real estate transactions in the greater Boise Valley:

  • Hybrid FIT, a fitness business, leased 2,880 square feet at the Maple Grove Center, 222 N. Maple Grove Road, Boise, Idaho.
  • AgStar, which provides financial services for agriculture and rural customers, leased 1,600 square feet at Silverstone Plaza, 3405 E. Overland Road, Suite 110, Meridian, Idaho.
  • Heart Fire, a counseling practice, leased 1,025 square feet at the Orchard Professional Center, 921 Orchard Street., Suite C, Boise, Idaho.
  • Sorenson Communications Inc., which provides phone relay and call caption services, leased 25,643 square feet at Silverstone Plaza, 405 E. Overland Road, Suite 300, Meridian, Idaho.
  • Kaleidoscope Pediatric Therapy LLC leased 2,451 square feet at the Boise Office Center, 7211 Franklin Road, Boise, Idaho.
  • Granite Restorations leased 1,829 square feet at the Maple Grove Center, 276-A Maple Grove Road, Boise, Idaho.
  • NxTran, which provides merchant payment services, leased 791 square feet at the Boise Office Center, 7253 Franklin Road, Boise, Idaho.


About The Sundance Company

Established in 1976, The Sundance Company has the experience to help you with your commercial real estate needs in Boise, Meridian, Nampa, and the greater Treasure Valley. If your requirements include property management, leasing, real estate development, project planning, construction or space planning then look to us. The Sundance Company has more than 1.5 million square feet of office and industrial space available in prime Boise and Meridian locations. More information is available at www.sundanceco.com or 208.322.7300.

More Room for Ideas in a Smaller Office

A recent article from the NY Times about gaining savings and productivity from smaller offices.

Ever since the economy started to slow down about five years ago, companies have been looking for ways to reduce their office space costs. One option that has become more popular is reconfiguring the office to fit the same number of workers in a smaller space, and either subleasing the leftover square footage or returning it to the landlord.

Certainly, the primary motive is saving money. But some companies and architects say that having employees in closer proximity makes for a more collegial and collaborative environment — and a more productive and profitable one.

“We wanted people to be able to work wherever the work is, in whatever style,” said Mike Grindell, the executive vice president and chief administrative officer of 22squared, an advertising agency in Atlanta that recently completed a renovation.

The agency originally had three floors at 1170 Peachtree Street NE, and was subletting two-thirds of one of the floors in 2009 when it hired the large architecture company Gensler to redesign its quarters and ensure it met LEED gold energy standards. Gensler teamed with Carter USA, an Atlanta-based commercial real estate company, as project manager and Humphries & Company from nearby Smyrna, Ga., as general contractor.

At 22squared, a privately held agency with $64.7 million in 2011 revenue, the team ended up with a 50,000-square-foot space on two floors that went from an emphasis on hierarchy to one about equality. Before the renovation, natural light was reserved for private offices and conference rooms; now sunlight reigns for all.

Walls were dismantled. Employee work stations are now by windows. Private offices are at the center of the firm’s two floors. Small collaborative spaces are prevalent. White boards and glass walls for writing are everywhere. Work groups come together, dissolve, then come back together again.

By Gensler’s own measure, the revised space has delivered favorable results. Collaboration has increased by 22 percent, according to Gensler’s Workplace Performance Index, which rates workplaces and employees before and after renovations. That score brings 22squared’s rating up to par with the top performers in the advertising industry.

“You see and feel work happening all over the space,” Mr. Grindell said. “There’s better density, energy and productivity on two floors now than on two and a third before.”

Kevin Parker, the president and chief executive of Deltek, a software engineering company in Herndon, Va., said consolidation solved a number of problems at once for his company.

“We were spread out on seven floors in four buildings,” Mr. Parker said. “There was friction from meetings and driving — the buildings were within 10 square miles. With the traffic here, that’s a lifetime.”

Deltek moved into a newly configured space in an existing building last November with the goals of consolidating the company, and taking advantage of cost savings, higher productivity, and more idea generation and sharing.

Now, about 700 Deltek headquarters employees, a diverse group resulting from 11 acquisitions since 2005, are all in one redesigned, six-story building. Employees from two of the acquired companies, once archrivals who competed fiercely to provide information and analysis to companies seeking government contracts, now work side by side.

“The us-versus-them went away,” Mr. Parker said. “It’s one team, one floor. Now we’ve got some mojo.”

Because Deltek’s corporate culture is focused around special events like celebrating new sales, the new building has a vertical and horizontal hub. Circular spaces feed into it to create a sense of community.

“They can bring people together for big announcements,” said Catherine Haley, a senior principal at HOK and Deltek’s architect. “It creates visibility and the ability to network with each other.”

Even some of the country’s largest companies are cutting space. Christian Bigsby, the senior vice president for worldwide real estate and facilities at GlaxoSmithKline, said the company was engaging in what it called an opportunistic “footprint reduction program.” It began to make the investment, based on vacancy, relocations, or lease terminations, about six years ago.

Located in 90 countries with primary administrative centers in Britain, the United States and Belgium, GlaxoSmithKline is enacting the program globally.

“We can move to a smaller building with a smarter, improved working environment for reduced S.G.A. costs,” Mr. Bigsby said, using an accounting abbreviation for selling, general and administrative expenses — essentially, the overhead and indirect costs.

Before the program began, 35 percent of GlaxoSmithKline’s work activities were taking place in cubicles or offices. But those spaces took up 85 percent of the company’s office space, what Mr. Bigsby called a significant misallocation of resources. The question became: if the company provides 85 percent of its space for 35 percent of its work, where was the rest happening?

The answer: in meeting rooms, corridors, coffee stations and during travel. “Our solution is to press down the 85 percent dedicated space and increase the variety of alternative work spaces, because people’s activities did not align to the traditional spaces.” Mr. Bigsby said. “The desk space is now about half of our footprint.”

The arrangement of the workplace into neighborhoods and communities, in the form of benching for six people at a stretch, is not without a down side. On what the company calls bonus day earlier this year, Mr. Bigsby scurried to find a private space to review his salary with his superior.

“Everyone was trying to get a one-on-one,” he said. He had to settle for talking to his boss at a video conference out on the floor.

GlaxoSmithKline provides eight seats for every 10 employees, so it is possible that people might work in a different space every day.

“You get what’s available,” said Ms. Haley of HOK, who was also responsible for the Glaxo design. “If you can work on a computer in the middle seat of an airplane on a flight to Europe, then you can work at a different desk every day. It’s a hotelling desk — it’s not assigned to you.”

Bottom line, the clients say, is that the compression pays off.

“Our contract cycle used to take three to four days,” said Mr. Parker of Deltek. “Now we’ve cut it to hours.” Better yet, the firm has saved $1.5 million in rent.

At 22squared, the savings came during midnight of the recession, when the firm signed a new lease on its Atlanta office. “Let’s just say that over 11 years, it’s 15 to 20 percent better than what we had, plus a top-to-bottom total renovation,” Mr. Grindell said.

For a firm like GlaxoSmithKline, employing about 100,000 people globally, there are certain economies of scale. “We’ve reduced costs by $50 million a year just in our administrative spaces,” Mr. Bigsby said.

The Sundance Company: Tailor-Made Commercial Real Estate Solutions

The Sundance Company, a commercial real estate leader with more than 1.5 million square feet of office and industrial space available in prime locations throughout the Boise Valley, prides itself on its ability to provide options and tailor solutions to its client’s needs.

Since 1976, The Sundance Company has offered a multitude of possibilities with its build-to-suit commercial real estate options throughout the Boise Valley. Confident tenants and buyers look to The Sundance Company for build-to-suit/construction because The Sundance Company has the size and diversity to avoid the need for a “one-size-fits-all” approach—thereby assuring customized solutions that are genuinely tailored to each client’s needs.
If the current market does not offer what your business is looking for, you can now consider designing and building a facility to suit your exact specifications, rather than renewing your current lease or settling for an “as is” building. Build-to-suit opportunities represent just one of the alternatives available to companies today in the Boise Valley commercial real estate environment. Many executives procuring space for their companies find a build-to-suit option most advantageous, and The Sundance Company can effectively and efficiently assist you with your needs.

Delivering customized solutions is the foundation of The Sundance Company’s build-to-suit program as we have collaborated and worked with customers to manage the entire build-to-suit process, including site selection, land acquisition, facility specifications, permitting, construction and ownership. The proven structure of The Sundance Company’s build-to-suit project team benefits our customers through its articulation of a clear mission and direction. The in-house management team values its personal connections and the relationship of trust it has created with its tenants and property owners, which include national and regional companies, some of whom have been in Sundance buildings for more than 15 years.

About The Sundance Company
Established in 1976, The Sundance Company has the experience to help you with your commercial real estate needs in Boise, Meridian, Nampa, and the greater Treasure Valley. If your requirements include property management, leasing, real estate development, project planning, construction or space planning then look to us. The Sundance Company has more than 1.5 million square feet of office and industrial space available in prime Boise and Meridian locations. More information is available at www.sundanceco.com or 208.322.7300.

How iPads and Tablet Devices are Changing Businesses

Do you BYOD? That’s Bring Your Own Device, which refers to the workforce using their own mobile devices to perform work functions at the office.  As the mobile workplace continues to evolve and technology innovation continues to accommodate mobile work preferences, BYOD is an increasing trend that is having an effect on business.

A lot of employees have been reading and sending work e-mails on their mobile device for a few years now.  They probably started doing it a few years ago when the Palm devices and their stylus were popular, then their mobile email use probably increased when their company adopted the BlackBerry devices with their click wheel on the side.  Then Apple revolutionized the way we use phones when it released the iPhone, which introduced apps for just about anything and eased the way people use the web – and not just email – with the smart phones.  After changing mobile phone habits, Apple then turned its attention to revolutionizing the way we perform our mobile computing.  Apple released the iPad using the same revolutionary interface from the iPhone, and for the past couple years, the iPad has grown from the latest cool device to a viable laptop-killer.

Mobile work is not just on the rise; it’s exploding in popularity with the latest mobile devices and is affecting how organizations manage their workforce and how network connectivity is delivered to their mobile devices. An astounding 42.5% of workers polled are using the iPad with another 27.7% planning to get the iPad in the next 6 months.

 

About The Sundance Company
Established in 1976, The Sundance Company has the experience to help you with your commercial real estate needs in Boise, Meridian, Nampa, and the greater Treasure Valley. If your requirements include property management, leasing, real estate development, project planning, construction or space planning then look to us. The Sundance Company has more than 1.5 million square feet of office and industrial space available in prime Boise and Meridian locations. More information is available at www.sundanceco.com or 208.322.7300.

Commercial Real Estate: All Sectors Continue to Improve, Multifamily Strong

Shaking off a prolonged impact from the recession, fundamentals are gradually improving in all of the major commercial real estate sectors, according to the National Association of Realtors® quarterly commercial real estate forecast. The apartment rental sector has fully recovered and is growing.

The findings also are confirmed in NAR’s recent quarterly Commercial Real Estate Market Survey, which collects data from members about market activity.

Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, says new jobs are the key. “Ongoing job creation, which is at a higher level this year, is fueling an underlying demand for commercial real estate space, assisted by a steady increase in consumer spending,” he says. “The pattern shows gradually declining commercial vacancy rates, with consequential but generally modest rent growth.”

Yun expects the economy to add 2 to 2.5 million jobs both this year and in 2013, on the heels of 1.7 million new jobs in 2011, assuming a new federal budget is passed before the end of the year. “Although we need even stronger job growth, by far the greatest impact of job creation is in multifamily housing, where newly formed households striking out on their own have increased demand for apartment rentals – this is the sector with the lowest vacancy rates and strongest rent growth, which is attracting many investors.”

Rising apartment rents also are having a positive impact on home sales because many long-time renters now view homeownership as a better long-term option, Yun notes.

A large problem remains for purchases of commercial property priced under $2.5 million. “Our recent commercial lending survey shows that there is very little capital available for small business, which is significantly impacting commercial real estate transactions, although funding is less restrictive for bigger properties.”

NAR’s latest Commercial Real Estate Outlook offers projections for four major commercial sectors and analyzes quarterly data in the office, industrial, retail and multifamily markets. Historic data for metro areas were provided by REIS, Inc., a source of commercial real estate performance information.

Office Markets

Vacancy rates in the office sector are projected to fall from 16.3 percent in the second quarter of this year to 16.0 percent in the second quarter of 2013.

The markets with the lowest office vacancy rates presently are Washington, D.C., with a vacancy rate of 9.3 percent; New York City, at 10.0 percent; and New Orleans, 12.6 percent.

Office rents should increase 2.0 percent this year and 2.5 percent in 2013. Net absorption of office space in the U.S., which includes the leasing of new space coming on the market as well as space in existing properties, is forecast at 24.7 million square feet in 2012 and 48.0 million next year.

Industrial Markets

Industrial vacancy rates are likely to decline from 11.0 percent in the current quarter to 10.7 percent in the second quarter of 2013.

The areas with the lowest industrial vacancy rates currently are Orange County, Calif., with a vacancy rate of 4.7 percent; Los Angeles, 5.0 percent; and Miami at 7.2 percent.

Annual industrial rent is expected to rise 1.6 percent in 2012 and 2.4 percent next year. Net absorption of industrial space nationally is seen at 44.1 million square feet this year and 62.4 million in 2013.

Retail Markets

Retail vacancy rates are forecast to decline from 11.3 percent in the second quarter to 10.7 percent in the second quarter of 2013.

Presently, markets with the lowest retail vacancy rates include San Francisco, 3.7 percent; Fairfield County, Conn., at 4.0 percent; and Long Island, N.Y., at 5.0 percent.

Average retail rent should rise 0.8 percent this year and 1.3 percent in 2013. Net absorption of retail space is projected at 8.0 million square feet this year and 21.9 million in 2013.

Multifamily Markets

The apartment rental market— multifamily housing— is likely to see vacancy rates drop from 4.5 percent in the second quarter to 4.3 percent in the second quarter of 2013; apartment vacancy rates below 5 percent generally are considered a landlord’s market with demand justifying higher rents.

Areas with the lowest multifamily vacancy rates currently are New York City, 2.1 percent; Portland, Ore., at 2.3 percent; and Minneapolis at 2.4 percent.

After rising 2.2 percent last year, average apartment rent is expected to increase 4.0 percent in 2012 and another 4.1 percent next year. “Such a rent increase will raise the core consumer inflation rate. The Federal Reserve, in turn, may be forced to raise interest rates, possibly as early as late 2013.”

Multifamily net absorption is forecast at 215,900 units this year and 230,300 in 2013.

Source: RISMedia

Boise ranked among the best places to live, do business

The Boise Valley, home of The Sundance Company since 1976, has been recognized in several high-profile publications by ranking the city as one of the best places in the country to do business and live. You can read the rest of the article here, or read the highlights below.

Brookings, a nonprofit public policy organization that specializes in research, named Boise as one of the top 20 fastest recovering cities. The calculation was based on growth, employment and housing prices.

KPMG studies business environments across the world. The company says in the Pacific U.S., Boise is the lowest-cost place to do business.

Part of that vision is not only a business friendly community, but a family friendly one as well.  Forbes Magazine gave Boise the number two spot on its list because of low crime rates and high school quality.

In the past six months, the Boise Valley Economic Partnership has seen nearly three times as many businesses looking to relocate or expand here. The recent rankings will play into some of those companies’ final decisions. And while Boise is the city named on the lists, business and community leaders say the rankings really extend beyond the city and apply to all of the Treasure Valley.

The entire state of Idaho is also getting some national love from the press. CNN Money just named Idaho as the friendliest state for small businesses.

About The Sundance Company
Established in 1976, The Sundance Company has the experience to help you with your commercial real estate needs in Boise, Meridian, Nampa, and the greater Treasure Valley. If your requirements include property management, leasing, real estate development, project planning, construction or space planning then look to us. The Sundance Company has more than 1.5 million square feet of office and industrial space available in prime Boise and Meridian locations. More information is available at www.sundanceco.com or 208.322.7300.