Skip to content
  • Home
  • Sales
    • 1st Quarter Sales
    • 2nd Quarter Sales
    • 3rd Quarter Sales
    • 4th Quarter Sales
  • Leases
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Login
  • Home
  • Sales
    • 1st Quarter Sales
    • 2nd Quarter Sales
    • 3rd Quarter Sales
    • 4th Quarter Sales
  • Leases
  • Advertise
  • Subscribe
  • Login

Older Medical Offices Put a Drag on Phoenix Market Q3

  • Home
  • Archive
  • Older Medical Offices Put a Drag on Phoenix Market Q3
Archive
/
November 23, 2016
/
Heart and Soul Web Design
image_pdfimage_print

q3-colliersConsolidations of Medical Practices Make Pre-2000 Buildings Obsolete

Phoenix, Arizona – Colliers International in Greater Phoenix released its third quarter 2016 Medical Office Market Report for Greater Phoenix.  The report indicates that older medical office buildings are no longer optimally functional and have put a drag on the market.  Report highlights are outlined below.  For more details, refer to the attached report or click Here to view online.

  • Vacancy of Medical Office space in Greater Phoenix dropped slightly in the third quarter.  The vacancy has improved 120 basis points in the past 12 months.  The majority of improvement has been seen in off-campus properties
  • Net absorption of medical office space was positive, but just 58,000 square feet in the past three months.  This is the lowest quarter for net absorption in more than a year.
  • Rental rates ticked slightly higher during the third quarter, but improvement was modest and focused in off-campus buildings.  The easing pace of tenant demand is slowing the rate of rental rates.
  • Investment activity during third activity showed improvements in condo building sales and a slowdown in sales of traditional medical buildings.  Quarterly pricing trends were uneven, but 2016 prices are still higher than in 2015.

One reason for slowing vacancy improvement is that older space constructed prior to 2000 was designed for smaller, private practices.  Since the Affordable Care Act was implemented, we have seen practice consolidations that require larger suites.  Smaller spaces in older buildings are proving difficult to lease, leading to higher vacancies in these buildings.  The vacancy rate in buildings constructed before 2000 is nearly twice as high as those built during this millennium.

The Greater Phoenix medical office market will continue to benefit from growing population and an expanding labor market.  Net absorption has been positive as a result of tenant growth.  Demand is picking up well in suburban markets such as the East Valley and West Valley, which has spurred new development.  The recent election has increased uncertainty about the future of healthcare, but traditional local drivers of medical office demand should remain in place.

 

 

Share Now!

Recent Posts

  • Tucson Medical Dental Complex Acquired for $5.01 Million by Colorado-Based Investment Firm
  • CBRE Arranges Sale of Ocotillo Bay Apartments for $90.5 Million
  • Circle K Acquires Prime Sahuarita Pad Site for $800K, Plans New Store Adjacent to Safeway
  • Pima Board of Supervisors approve funding for Rincon Manor Project
  • Arizona Sells Marana Prison Back to Former Operator for $15 Million

Archives

Copyright © 2025 Real Estate Daily News
Website by: Heart and Soul Web Design

Scroll to Top