Capstone Report Provides Look at RI Commercial Real Estate Market

GoLocalProv Business Team

Capstone Report Provides Look at RI Commercial Real Estate Market

Office market in RI has not recovered
Capstone Properties Vice President Neil Amper released his report, titled “The Capstone Report,” on the Rhode Island real estate market.

The report finds that there were less transactions across all sectors of the Rhode Island real estate market in 2017 than there were in 2016. However, the first 6-weeks of 2018 were up compared to the same 6-week period in 2017.

However, the report also shows that the office market has not recovered, with average gross rents totaling approximately $18 per square foot, reducing vacancy across the state to under  6%.

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“The lack of new construction in the industrial sector, which is also the only segment showing an increase, may be the factor for the increase in price per square foot,” said Amper.     

RI Real Estate by the Numbers

According to the report, “There have been very little new additions to the retail market, there has been some shifting of retailers from Bald Hill Road in Warwick to the Rhode Island Mall. On Thayer Street in Providence, 37,000 square feet of space, representing 26% of the existing retail stores, has been leased to new tenants primarily from Boston and New York.”

The report adds, “The office market continued to absorb space with very little new construction occurring, but rents have remained stable at $18 per square feet. There was $296 million sold between 2015– 2017, resulting in a total of 3 million square feet transacted.”

Amper says this recent activity should be looked at in comparison to the $211 million sold between 2012– 2014 and the 2 million square feet transacted.

The report continues, “Even with less units sold in 2017, the apartment market continued to show improvement, resulting in sales volume increasing to $188 million from $173 million in 2016. The price per unit also increased from $104,595 in 2016 to $188,702 in 2017.”

Amper concludes, “The apartment sector has been a consistent performer for a number of years. The price per unit in smaller apartments has steadily increased especially on the East Side of Providence. It has been the strongest market sector, and while mill conversions have slowed, new construction has continued.”


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