After a tough few years, business space has become a prized commodity in and around Bakersfield, with demand for some property exceeding pre-recession levels.

Led by warehouse work and other industrial activity, the area's commercial real estate market is posting across-the-board improvement in vacancy rates. Some developers have responded by building, or proposing to build, new industrial space, offices and retail space.

The local market is almost superlative by one measure: Bakersfield's 4.1 percent warehouse vacancy rate at the end of September was the nation's third-lowest, behind only Honolulu and Los Angeles, according to Colliers International.

"Bakersfield is proving to be the gem of the Central Valley," Bakersfield industrial real estate broker Wayne Kress noted in an email highlighting local strength in energy, logistics and agriculture.

The tightening market speaks well of Bakersfield's economic prospects. While not all the property uses are part of high-paying industries, they nevertheless contribute jobs that support local services and bolster the housing market, which, in turn, generates additional employment.

"In the short term, very low (industrial) vacancy rates like we are now experiencing are a harbinger of large-scale construction projects that will bring jobs, wages and (economic spillover) effects," Cal State Bakersfield economics professor Mark Evans noted.

"In the long run, these new properties provide the infrastructure that is essential to attracting new companies that further build our economic base in areas such as logistics and energy-related support services."

Even retail, the weakest category of Bakersfield's commercial real estate market, is posting substantial gains from the depths of 2010 and 2011. Properties left vacant by the recession are beginning to fill up, and chains such as Walmart are poised to expand locally.

This sort of staggered progress is to be expected, said Bakersfield commercial broker Anthony Olivieri. Jobs generated by industrial and office activity tend to feed the home market, which he said is what outside retailers study when making decisions about where to grow.

"The big picture is that retail does trail, generally, the job creation out of the industrial sector and the office sector," Olivieri said.

Read more:
Businesses snap up commercial space

Related Posts
January 12, 2014 at 9:46 pm by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Retail Space Construction