hoobo, on Sep 14 2007, 12:09 PM, said:
VW is an automaker that is bleeding money in the U.S. They are not going to move into a high-rise because they'd bleed even more money. They are moving to Herndon, not Tyson's Corner and not Rosslyn, but Herndon. Take a look at the F-500 companies in Virginia. Do you think CarMax or Circuit City will move into a high-rise office tower? How about the number 2 company on the list, Sprint-Nextel? Verizon and AT&T have the cash, but S-N has nothing. Even Norfolk-Southern squeezed money from the state to keep from relocating to Philadelphia. Of all the companies, Capital One, Dominion Resources, and Genworth Financial are the only ones I can see in a true high-rise tower. Of those: DR is in downtown Richmond, Genworth is in suburban Richmond, and CO is in Tyson's Corner along with Gannett. CO also has big operations in Richmond. That's why Richmond is the most likely candidate. Followed by Tyson's Corner after the Metro is built through there. But you have to also remember that Altria is moving only 200 employees to Richmond, which is 4 or 5 floors of office space. Considering that Wachovia Securities is moving 1000+ employees out, you get a net gain in vacant office space. MeadWestvaco is building a mid-rise, not high-rise, HQ in downtown Richmond. As for Tyson's Corner, the same Metro line will serve Reston and Herndon and their office complexes, which means more competition.
Wow, you sure do a good job of keeping up with things being so far away!
CarMax recently finished a new environmentally friendly HQ in suburbia. Circuit City definitely won't be moving into anything new unless they can figure out how to compete with Best Buy. Cap One recently built a huuuuge corporate campus in West Creek in suburban Richmond, so unless they decide to move the Corporate HQ down 95 then there's not much hope for a highrise there. Dominion's already in a highrise... I've heard they are looking to empty out of their Innsbrook offices and send those folks downtown. Most of their downtown/riverfront space is full and definitely couldn't absorb the employees in Innsbrook, but I see them simply leasing space, not building a new tower. Genworth is in a midrise out near Philip Morris' HQ which is in the old Reynolds HQ, and I imagine Altria will be moving into Reynolds Crossing--walking distance to PMUSA.
Wachovia Securities will stagger its withdrawal out of Riverfront Plaza as to not flood the market with vacant space. Still, Riverfront Plaza is some of the nicest/most coveted Class A space in downtown if not the region so it should be absorbed sooner than later. It could impact a new tower proposal downtown, but the way I understand it, the new tower proposal is more about ego than market conditions.
Edited by wrldcoupe4, 16 September 2007 - 10:53 AM.













