8:30am-City of Dallas
Our journey has taken its last stop, the great Dallas, TX...home sweet home. We had the opportunity to meet with Mayor Leppert and various city officials to gauge how Dallas did things different from the other major MSA's in the great State of Texas.
Parks & Recreation Director, Paul Dyer
Mr. Dyer emphasized the importance and impact the decision to commission a Master Plan in 2004. The Belo Foundation donated $400,000 of the $1.5M for the MP drafting.This has proved to be very beneficial for the City in recruiting new companies and an enhanced downtown and surrounding area. It is very tough to have the 15 council members, all from surrounding districts (non-CBD) to agree with the plan to revitalize the plighted areas of downtown, and include the expansion/upkeep of the parks system. Dallas was the first city to branch out and purchase urban land for plant and parks usage. So with that, the sense of urbanism has always been in the back of the city's mind, and they have strategically positioned themselves to use whatever means needed to expand the greater need of the taxpayer dollar. Mr. Dyer touched extensively on the use of eminent domain for condemnation of land through the "Trust Republic Clan," and it's effects when building landmark projects like the bridge across, and the 6-acre Woodall Rogers Deck Park. With the deck park, there are NO taxpayer dollars being utilized. The funding structure is as follows: $106 total project cost, of which $20M is from Dallas City Council (bonded), $20M State STEP funds, $ 16.7M Fed Stimulus funds, & $53M private equity donations. Amazing! The fair park and south Dallas corridor is the next phase that needs to be concentrated on, and the city is giving incentives and encourages public-private partnerships if a feasbile project is presented. He mentioned that the Deck Park will work with ground leases, and all of the establishments within will have specific building code requirements.
9:30am- Mayor Tom Leppert
Through John's amazing networking, we had the honor of meeting our most respected guest on the trip yet, Mayor Leppert of the City of Dallas. Mr. Leppert spent a great deal of time touching on the subject of sustainable development, and with his background as a CEO of a national home building company. He is a noteworthy source to listen to. He mentioned that 40% of the energy the City of Dallas uses is wind energy, and stressed that we have the largest alternative energy city government fleet in the state of Texas. He is working directly with real estate developers and professionals to have all new construction mandated to green standards within 10 years. The city currently works hand in hand with homebuilders and the AHA to implement water & energy efficiency standards. An interesting note he mentioned was that LEED was the first privately funded movement to promote sustainable energy, whereas the public sector is greatly credited for it. With the city's "Vacant Building Initiative" the city can send a swarm of inspectors and code officials out in the streets to enforce and spot out problematic areas, and through a series of these, the end goal is to eventually have the all of the unsafe older buildings up to code. There is a very big need to push for the productivity and expansion/redevelopment of the southern sector of the city, and the Mayor is pushing bravely at doing so with a grounded approach. Mayor Leppert handed it over to the Sustainable Development & Construction team.
10am- Sustainable Development & Construction
Since the 1960's, housing development has usually pulled the Dallas market out of recessionary periods, and today's picture is a complete 180-turn. In 2009, the city issued a mere 700 building permits, down 75% from a few years back. The only projects that are going on currently are public projects, that may have a private backing. The "Forward Dallas" vision has surfaced the need for redevelopment instead of a greenfield development vision. It focuses on creating jobs in high density, redveloping infill areas like the CBD and surround areas. All other major hubs are being targeted also, especially the "Five Points" area which has become the premier hangout for notorious drug dealers, crime, & prostitution. The issue of homeless population came up, and Dallas has 6,000 as per the latest count. Many suburbs send their homeless over to Dallas with a "one way bus fare," knowing that Dallas has more resources to deal with the needs of these people. The Dallas Bridge Center and other projects similar to it work as a supportive housing/shelter for homeless, but there is still not enough donation to clear all of the homeless off of the streets. Permanent supportive housing is similar to what the New Hope Housing projects does, and could be retrofitted into staged development scheme in Dallas. Central Dallas Ministries is another organization that helps reproduce the homeless population that have gone through many issues.
11am-Dallas City Design Studio, Carl Zevenkowsky & David Whitley
This is a new department housed in City Hall, and was created to assist the city in creating a new design concept for public projects like the M-Bridge and the Deck Park. The focus now is on the urban growth across the Trinity River after the bridge comes through, and working with local residents and city officials to keep everyone feeling connected. The staff of highly qualified designers and conceptual thinkers had a great wealth of information to give us. They mentioned how they are promoting and assisting the likes of Phil Romano to develop the 80 acres he has bought across the Trinity, and Brady Wood, who is lobbying for TIGER grants and the passage of the Streetcar idea to connect all of Dallas. There was extensive talk on the block 108 HUD loan being used in the land assembly across from the VA Hospital Dart Station. The CDRC is a project that Mr. Zevenkowsky really concentrates on, and feels can stimulate an economy in times like this. In conjunction with the US Immigration Dept, the City of Dallas has created the EB-5 program that allows a foreigner to invest $500,000 into a business venture that creates 10 jobs, and if after a few other minor stipulations, they can receive their US citizenship. A very nifty program that gets me thinking about sourcing capital from my dispersed family members around the world!
There was a wealth of information taken in from the meeting with the City of Dallas, and it was an amazing opportunity to get in contact with the people that are making our great city work (sorry Ft. Worth, ha!) We walked over to the Aloft Hotel after the meeting , and had lunch there before meeting with the owners and operators.
1:30pm- Aloft Hotel, Suhas Naik, Ted Hamilton & parnters
The Aloft Hotel is like no other limited/mid-tier hotel I have ever seen before. This flagship is a product of the Starwood Hotel group, better known for it's big box flags like Westin & Sheraton. This specific property was a joint venture with two very experienced groups involved in real estate development & redevelopment. Hamilton properties has done a handful of adaptive reuse projects in the Dallas CBD, and has a great working realtionship with the City of Dallas and Suha's team. The site was built by the Santa Fe Rail Co. and later used as the Haggar Clothing headquarters and manufacturing/distributing plant. The team bought it in 1998, and started developing the project only a few years ago. The project was made possible, according to Naik, because of the historic tax credits and TIF money. The property is 193 units, the largest Aloft in the Starwood family, and has 8,000sf of meeting space that is leased out through a third party firm. They are currently at a below proforma ADR, and occupancy is right around where they projected. But the name of the game, according to the property manager Janice Properties, is keeping a stern rate. Once the rate dips, it takes the value crashing down. The construction of the proerty was $175,000 a key, and the 9th floor was added. A total of 2 1/2 acres were utilized in the development. Apart from the $5M Historic tax credit, $4.2 was funded from TIF, and $5M was equity. The rest is debt with Hillcrest Bank, a local bank. They had about $150,000 of remediation costs, relatively small for a grand project like it. We got to tour the ultra-chic and lofty hotel with the flamboyant sales guy, and it was indeed a very unique adaptive-reuse. All in all, the project was designed with great detail, and will be a great investment if they can make it out of this downturn and also feed off of the convention center hotel once it opens.
2:30pm, Craig Ranch, David Craig, Founder/CEO
Again, through John's amazing networking skills, we were able to meet with a very well known developer. Craig Ranch is a massive master planned community positioned in one of the strongest growth markets in the country, Mckinney, TX. The 1125 acres has a current use of office, retail and residential, along with a school system and parks & recreation. The new urbanist vision Mr. Craig caught on to a few years ago was the result of a trip to the ULI meeting in Toronto. The TPC Craig Ranch is a partnership with some of the greatest golfers in the world, and has proven to be a very popular choice for local and national golfers. The development was envisioned through a byproduct of a TIF, called a 380-agreement. It is specific to the Craig Ranch boundaries and entails a very attractive opportunity for the developer and the city. All impact fees are waived, and a lot of public/private funding of infrastructures has made the street scape of the community very beautiful. Mckinney has benefited from approximately $22M in tax revenue from the project alone over the past 9-10 years. The funding for the aggregate land assemblage is in part by Craig himself, and also a silent majority investor from Kansas City, also one of the largest car dealership owners in the nation. The Director of Development at the City of Mckinney gave us insight on how they have been working with David Craig on this project, and the outlook and positions they are holding for the future. The city has entered into a partnership with Craig on the Baseball/Softball and playing fields in community. The CCNR, or building code regulation specific to Craig Ranch, is a vital tool to keep the homogeneity of the project after selling tracts to other builders. The biggest ounce of wisdom he had to share with us is that you have to be flexible and let the market make decisions in times like these. The partnership seems to have gone through a lot ups and downs, but the strong relationships will drive this project to success over the long haul.
Its a wrap!