Construction Poised to Make Gains in 2014

Commercial contractors have shaken off the doldrums and are cutting loose on a big list of Clark County projects this year.

Construction activity in 2014 won’t break any records, but the project list keeps growing as the economy gains strength. A new round of retail stores and developments, some started in 2013, is leading the way. Wal-Mart Stores Inc. has two stores under construction and set to open this year including a big-box Supercenter store in Battle Ground and a grocery-only Wal-Mart Neighborhood Market at East Fourth Plain and Grand boulevards. Also, three national hotel chains are in various stages of development to add more than 300 new guest rooms to the Vancouver lodging scene. National retailers Ross Dress for Less and Jo-Ann Fabric and Craft are each developing new stores in the area this year.

The national retailers will be joined by coffee shops, convenience marts and fast-food vendors as part of the wave of rebounding construction in the county, according to local developers.”The retailers have some good expansion plans going on,” said Mike Jenkins, a developer with Vancouver-based MAJ Development. His company will start on several retail projects for specific, signed tenants this year, including a redevelopment of the former Ruby Tuesday’s restaurant site at Southeast Mill Plain Boulevard and 164th Avenue in Vancouver.

“You saw the retailers go dormant for a few years and now they’re rolling into full expansion mode,” said Jenkins, who has developed numerous local and West Coast properties for retailers including 7-Eleven.

Contractors took out construction permits worth a combined value of nearly $250 million within Vancouver’s city limits and in unincorporated parts of Clark County, according to building reports issued by the two jurisdictions. The total represents a 72 percent increase over 2012, when $144.2 million worth of commercial construction permits were handed out to contractors.

The increased activity signals continued job growth for construction businesses, among the community’s most dominant industries. It also offers opportunities for subcontractors and vendors seeking to work on the projects, driving demand and pushing development costs higher.

“We’re seeing some more aggressive, competitive pricing,” Jenkins said. He attributed the rising prices to demand and the fact that some construction companies did not survive the economic downturn, leaving a pool of fewer competitors to bid on the rush of new retail projects.

Office projects

Higher costs are one of several trends shaping the commercial real estate market this year. The community also is seeing a trickle of new office projects being built with specific users in mind, said Eric Fuller, principal at Vancouver-based brokerage firm Eric Fuller & Associates.

Among the projects is a five-story, 150,000-square-foot office building under construction at the Camas campus of Fisher Investments and a two-story office building that is set to open next fall at Northeast 136th Avenue and Ninth Street. The latter project will house five separate state agencies that are part of the Department of Social and Health Services.

“What these have in common is they are user-based,” Fuller said, adding that most lenders require office projects to be spoken for, with pre-leasing that occupies at least 60 percent of the space before construction loans are issued.

Clark County’s office vacancy rate is still about 18 percent, lower than the 20 percent vacancy rate at the height of the downturn, but not low enough to trigger speculative construction, Fuller said.

“New construction happens when business recovery is in midterm mode and I don’t think anybody thinks we’re there yet,” he said. “But we are higher than the bottom we experienced in 2010 and 2011.”

Fuller and other real estate experts anticipate improving employment numbers and increasing home sales will continue to spur absorption and, in turn, new commercial development.

“We’ll see a strong surge in leasing up and the reduction of current available inventory,” said Ryan Hurley, with Hurley Development in downtown Vancouver. Hurley’s company continues to focus on redevelopment projects in the downtown core, where a walkable grid and retro space provide an opportunity to foster a budding urban enclave of small Web-based businesses that employ the young, the entrepreneurial and the hip.

He sees the area’s up-and-coming craft beer industry and culinary culture as keys to revitalizing a downtown long in need of an energy infusion.

“We really need to be more thoughtful and creative to get those smaller companies here,” Hurley said.

Although few public projects will be taking center stage in 2014, Fuller said some projects built with public money will begin to spur private development. As an example, an $8 million office, the Salmon Creek Medical Plaza at Northeast 139th Street and 10th Avenue, is an outgrowth of ongoing work on the $133 million Salmon Creek Interchange Project.

Jenkins also expects to start work this year on a $7 million retail redevelopment project at 406 N.E. 139th Street, an area that will receive greater exposure to vehicle traffic when the overpass opens this year.

The new crop of projects along the route provide evidence that public investment formed the foundation of Clark County’s commercial construction comeback.

“The public invested in the darkest days of recession and those projects are visible now,” Fuller said.

 

Full Article

by Cami Joner

The Columbian – January 19, 2014

 

Photo by Steven Lane

Dining Out: Crave Grille Dishes up the Extraordinary

By Karen Livingston for The Columbian

Published: December 20, 2013, 6:00 AM

Photo by Zachary Kaufman, The Columbian

Why: Crave Grille was originally in downtown Vancouver, across from the courthouse, for a year and a half before relocating to The Palms Plaza.

The grill offers American cuisine: artisan burgers, barbecue and some exclusive selections such as the Karubi Rib, a tender, meaty pork slow-roasted and smoked and then crispy fried.

Though family-friendly, the atmosphere and prices are more suited for adults.

Atmosphere: A cool stone and metallic color palette is accented with red and black. Booths offer seating by the windows, tables and chairs set for four fill in the open floor, and in the bar area there is bar seating as well as a tall counter at the window. An assortment of lighting fixtures include halogen track and single-bulb drop lights.

A large-screen TV provides entertainment.

The open kitchen is roomy and tidy and the restaurant’s overall vibe is an artistic blend of elements: It feels like a food mechanic’s hangout.

What I tried: With “Walking Dead” on a two-month hiatus, I couldn’t pass up the Zombie Double Burger. Diners may choose from housemade chips, French fries, sweet potato fries, or a small side salad to accompany the burgers. I decided on the housemade chips.

I was told that the chef, when he created this burger, had in mind a burger for the apocalypse. As in, the last meal, or one you could eat off of for a while. He brought this vision to the plate by utilizing a full pound of beef, pepper jack cheese, lettuce, tomato, bacon, ham, habanero relish, a fried egg, crispy-fried onions, hot pepper sauce, and of course, let’s not forget the bun. The burger, in all its glory, stands about a quarter- to a half-inch taller than the iPhone. Unless you hold the record for the largest gape, you will need to use the knife plunged through the middle of the burger to slice it up for consumption.

With a burger of this caliber, you really have to put aside any and all dietary concerns in order to indulge with a guilt-free conscience. If you can do this, every taste bud will thank you. And if you can finish it, you can extend your survival beyond the average 4 to 6 weeks without food. I was full after 10 minutes with still more than half the burger left.

The housemade chips were crinkle-cut, crispy, and fresh and hot from the fryer. They were seasoned just right and made a delicious accompaniment for the burger.

I didn’t have room for dessert, so I ordered a chocolate mousse to go. It consisted of three round layers — super-moist double-chocolate cake, milk-chocolate mousse and white-chocolate mousse. It was drizzled with a cherry sauce and topped with a maraschino cherry. It was a scrumptious blend of sweet.

Menu highlights beyond what I tried: Beer-battered fish and chips is on the menu, as is a macaroni and cheese made with a vodka-based cheese sauce; you can add bacon, barbecued spicy pulled pork, or grilled chicken.

Rockfish is a gluten-free selection, and there is a Portobello Veggie Sandwich made with a marinated and grilled portobello mushroom, lettuce, onion, tomato, pickle, Swiss cheese, and house sauce.

Other observations: The waitstaff was very attentive and friendly. The atmosphere was clean, comfortable, and unhurried. If the other menu items are as interesting as the Zombie Double Burger, then prices reflect an exclusive nature.

Cost: Burgers cost $12 to $16. House Specials are $8 to $9. Dinner items are $12.50 to $14. Salads range from $8 to $11. Sides are $4 and $5.

Hours: 11 a.m. to 10 p.m. Monday through Thursday. 11 a.m. to midnight on Friday and Saturday.

Where: 13025 N.E. Fourth Plain, Suite 104, Vancouver.

Telephone: 360-256-2001

Web:cravegrille.com.

ealth score: Crave Grille received a perfect score of 0 on Oct. 17. Clark County Public Health closes restaurants with a score of 100 or higher. For information, call 360-397-8428.

 

View full article at The Columbian

MAJ Development Named Best Read Estate Developer 2013

MAJ Development Named Best Read Estate Developer 2013

December 20, 2013 | The Vancouver Business Journal

The Vancouver Business Journal has named MAJ Development Corporation the top real estate developer in 2013. The VBJ awards companies in various sevice industries with the most votes.

A full list of the 2013 award winners can be view here.

We also congratulate Coldwell Banker Commercial Jenkins & Associates for their win as best commercial real estate firm.

Welcome, Pacific Dental

Crossroads at Mill Plain and 164th welcomes its newest tenant, Pacific Dental. MAJ Development just signed a 10 year lease with Pacific Dental, who has been recognized as one of America’s fastest-growing private companies. Pacific Dental will be taking 3,000 square feet of space and initiating Phase II of the retail development which is currently home to 7-Eleven, Mattress Discounters, ZoomCare, Allstate Insurance, Fisher’s Landing Chiropractic, VanCare and State Farm. Plans to break ground are estimated for the beginning of next year. This will be Pacific Dental’s first location in Washington as they break into the Vancouver market area. The company was established in 1994 and has more than 275 affiliated offices in the Southwest U.S.

MAJ Development Holds Ribbon Cutting Ceremony

September 12, 2013

MAJ Development Corporation co-hosted the September Greater Vancouver Chamber of Commerce B.A.S.H. (Business and Social Hour) and Ribbon Cutting Ceremony event. This event was Hawaiian themed, with a greeting at the door with a Hawaiian lei and a “passport” which circulated around the building for stamps from all the different islands (fellow tenants). All offices were decorated in an authentic Hawaiian theme and served food from none other than, the delicious Hula Boy Charbroil. After guests “traveled” through to all the islands, they were able to enter their passport into a drawing where many great prices were awarded. The evening concluded with the official Ribbon Cutting of MAJ Development Corporation’s new office located at 300 W. 15th Street, Suite 200 in downtown Vancouver.

View the Ribbon Cutting on Facebook

View the Ribbon Cutting on The Vancouver Chamber Website

School Supply Drive at MAJ Development Corporation

July 24, 2013

MAJ Development Corporation AND Coldwell Banker Commercial Jenkins & Associates are hosting their first School Supply Drive for the Vancouver School District. They will stuff backpacks with donated school supplies from the district’s list for first grade students. The Foundation for Public Schools will distribute the bags to first graders in need. MAJ and CBC ask that their family, friends, clients, and neighbors donate any of the items on the list provided. Cash, checks and gift cards are also welcome. They will be used by staff to purchase additional backpacks and supplies. View the Flyer Here

Please drop-off these items to our office July 29- August 22. Our office hours are 8:30a.m. – 5:00p.m.

Spread the word! Share the flyer below to help us raise enough supplies to stuff at least twenty backpacks.

Considering starting a supply drive of your own? Contact the Foundation for Public Schools to learn how.