While office real estate has taken a hit amid the coronavirus
pandemic, the life sciences sector has remained strong throughout this
year. Life sciences construction, leasing activity and funding for new
projects has held stable throughout the global health crisis.
There are between 800K and 900K SF of active lab requirements in
New York City — some of which is coming from companies trying to combat
the coronavirus, according to a CBRE report.
“The steady stream of life science projects under construction in
NYC, coupled with continued flow of private and public funding, have
positioned the market to continue the upward trajectory that we’ve seen
over the last 18 months,” CBRE Vice Chairman Steve Purpura said in a
release Wednesday.
“We are anticipating another surge in activity following the lift
of shelter-in-place orders given some pent-up-demand and the possibility
of more requirements in response to the current health crisis.”
Since March 20, when the city shut down, interest in leasing at
major life sciences properties in the city, such as 345 Park Ave. South,
owned by Deerfield Management; the Taystee Lab Building, owned by Janus
Property Co.; and Hudson Research Center, owned by Silverstein and
Taconic has remained high. Cell therapy engineering company BlueRocks
Therapeutics announced in April that it would expand by 20K SF at
Alexandria Real Estate Equities’ 728K SF Alexandria Center for Life
Science at 430 East 29th St.
CBRE predicts that total annual funding for New York City life
sciences from the National Institutes of Health will hit its highest
amount in the past 10 years at $2.2B. Life sciences employment retention
amid the current financial crisis has remained comparatively high, as
the country’s total number of jobless claims has eclipsed 40 million.
New York City is shaping up to be a cluster at the intersection of
the pharmaceutical and finance industries, Thor Equities Senior Vice
President for Life Sciences Bill Hunter said on Bisnow’s New York Life
Science Repositioning 101 webinar Thursday.
“When you look at life sciences clusters overall, they all have a
personality that goes along with them. Boston being one of the primary
clusters, an educational cluster. San Francisco is really tech-oriented,
and educational as well,” Hunter said.
“I think when you look at the confluence of pharmaceutical and
finance, you really look to Manhattan for that demand generator in that
cluster.”
The sector will continue to rise because of the infrastructure that
exists or has been built in the past, SGA New York Studio Manager
Brooks Slocum said. The city has a growing tech sector, plenty of
housing stock for high-paid workers and premier hospitals, he said.
“New York has enormous potential because it has all of the pieces
that make an important cluster in New York itself already,” Slocum said.
East Egg Project Management principal Yasmeen Ahmed Pattie pointed
to the number of companies looking for space in New York, even as office
leasing has slowed to a halt, as a sign the life sciences sector is
growing.
Both the public and private sectors have seen New York City’s life
sciences sector as a lucrative investment over the past few years. Last
year, the city committed to putting $500M to the sector and the state
appropriated $650M in its budget. Developers bet hundreds of millions on
the sector. Now, with the city’s success in reopening reliant on rapid
testing, it has been on the lookout for new life sciences properties to
build walk-in testing centers in. City officials and economic experts
predict that economic development planning around the life sciences
sector will be key in the city’s recovery.
https://www.bisnow.com/new-york/news/life-sciences/life-science-is-a-bright-spot-amid-the-pandemic-market-report-shows-104694
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