Demand for residential-style offices and bureau parks is still strong, though a best opportunities for enlargement are entrance in bigger Class A buildings with bigger spaces, pronounced Josh Moore, blurb manager during Edmond developer Turner Co. Inc.
North Edmond is still best matched for a smaller spaces, nonetheless Turner once suspicion a Village Center during Coffee Creek, north of Covell Road and easterly of Kelly Avenue, would be appealing to large bureau users, Moore pronounced Tuesday during a annual Edmond Economic Preview during a University of Central Oklahoma.
The meditative was that “decision makers and executives” vital in a adjacent Coffee Creek area “might pierce their companies out there,” Moore said.
It didn’t happen, he said, observant a biggest bureau space during Coffee Creek is 13,000 block feet.
Bigger is better
That competence sound big, though Moore pronounced companies of some distance that are flourishing wish some-more — only in case. Turner Co. calls it “office flex space” since a flourishing association that signs a franchise for 10,000 block feet wants it in a building with during slightest another 10,000 block feet for contingent enlargement but carrying to relocate.
Edmond needs some-more suppositional Class A bureau buildings with that kind of size, he said, crediting developer Clay Farha of B.D. Eddie Enterprises for kicking off a pierce toward bigger Class-A properties 10 years ago with Kelley Pointe Plaza, a 20,500-square-foot building during 33rd and Kelly Avenue.
Tags: office buildings