Google Ignites Real Estate Revival in Old Chicago Financial Hub

52 minutes ago 2

Article content

Google declined to say how many of its 2,000 Chicago employees would move into the building, or how many square feet the company would take up. The company has long-term leases at its Fulton Market locations that meet its current space needs, and it didn’t say whether it plans to stay at those properties after the opening of the Thompson Center.

Article content

The Central Loop could use a boost. It was one of Chicago’s worst-hit areas during the pandemic as offices emptied out. Vacancy was still 30% in the first quarter, a little higher than the 27% in the overall Chicago market, according to office data compiled by CBRE. The district’s 11 million square feet (1 million square meters) of empty space amounts to a major overhang of unused high-end space. The Thompson Center has 1.15 million square feet, according to the architecture firm that built it.

Article content

The Illinois state government considered selling the Thompson Center for years as a way to ease long-running budget woes, said Andy Manar, deputy governor for budget and economy and a former state senator.

Article content

“The running joke was, how many times can we sell the Thompson Center over and over to balance the state’s budget,” he said.

Article content

Article content

Under Governor JB Pritzker, the state finally got a deal done. It sold the property to the developers in 2022, in a transaction that valued the property at $105 million. Illinois got $30 million in cash plus the deed to another nearby property where it could move state employees. The developers then brought in Google.

Article content

“It was about correcting mistakes or getting things done that hadn’t been done in years,” Manar said.

Article content

It will take years to see the full effect of Google’s move, brokers cautioned. No other major companies have signed new leases on LaSalle recently, although CoStar News, a real estate information platform, has reported that market-data provider Morningstar is weighing whether to lease space from Google. 

Article content

The broader Central Loop area has some other tailwinds, however. The nearby West Loop has won over a lot of financial companies and other big customers over the last two decades or so, leading to higher prices and a lack of choices for new tenants. 

Article content

“If you want to be in West Loop, your options are slim if you want to be in Class A and trophy” space, said Karoline Eigel, a broker with Cushman & Wakefield. “So I think you’ll start seeing more people looking at Central Loop. 

Article content

Article content

Startups such as ElectronX, a power-derivatives exchange, are betting that Google’s presence will bolster the neighborhood. The area also has strong transit options and a wealth of offices, hotels and restaurants within walking distance. 

Article content

“From a recruitment perspective, from just that proximity perspective, I would expect there to be lots of other more innovative companies coming in around here,” said Sam Tegel, CEO of power-derivatives exchange company ElectronX, which recently moved into a building across the street from the Thompson Center. “That gave us comfort and confidence.”

Article content

Real estate veterans share the sentiment. 

Article content

John Vance, a principle with Stone Real Estate, said Google’s move is “such a statement of ‘Yeah, we believe in the office as the best environment to work for most people,’ and that is important for all downtowns.”

Article content

Allen Rogoway, a broker with tenant representative firm Cresa, recently assisted a subsidiary of French technology services company Equiniti in relocating from West Town to LaSalle Street. 

Article content

“When clients talk about submarkets and places to be, it’s real,” he said. “Get in now because expectations are that as the submarket starts to build on itself with Google, it will be going up.”

Article content

—With assistance from Julia Love.

Article content

Read Entire Article