Sunday, April 26, 2026

Bimbo Bakery to Move HQ from Horsham, PA to Texas

 By Candace Carlisle CoStar News

The U.S. subsidiary behind Mrs Baird’s and Sara Lee bread has decided to move its headquarters to Texas from Horsham, Pennsylvania.

Bimbo Bakeries USA has leased space within an office building in Irving, Texas, a city about 13 miles northwest of downtown Dallas. The move puts Bimbo USA closing to its parent company's Mexico City headquarters and is expected to strengthen collaboration and enable "faster, more integrated decision-making across operations," according to a statement.

Bimbo USA's parent company is Grupo Bimbo, the world's largest baking company with operations in 39 countries. Grupo Bimbo entered the U.S. market in 1998 when it bought Mrs Baird's Bakery, which was founded in Fort Worth, Texas, by Ninnie Baird in 1908.

“Texas was our first home and played a defining role in our early history," said Greg Koehrsen, president of Bimbo USA, in the statement. "We’ve built a strong presence here over the years, and this region remains central to who we are today."

The relocation of Bimbo USA's headquarters to Texas after 17 years of being based in the Philadelphia area "positions us to operate more efficiently as we continue to invest in our brands and our communities," Koehrsen added.

The company's other bakery brands include Arnold, Ball Park, Entenmann's, Little Bites, Oroweat, Thomas and Stroehmann. Bimbo USA has more than 20,000 workers in the United States as well as 50 manufacturing locations.

Bimbo USA's senior leadership team and other employees are already working at the new Dallas-area office, the company said, with recruiting underway to fill additional roles. According to CoStar data, the company moved into about 7,000 square feet in the building in December.

A spokesperson for the company confirmed to CoStar News that employees have relocated to Dallas over the "last few months" with the new office expected to be "completed in June." In all, the spokesperson said about 100 workers will be based at the Dallas headquarters.

Still, Bimbo USA said it remains committed to the greater Philadelphia area and will keep its sales center and regional operations in Conshohocken, Pennsylvania.

Dallas is "a significant market" for Bimbo USA with multiple bakeries, sales centers and distribution centers in North Texas, according to the statement.

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State PA's office consolidation adds pressure on Local landlords

By Brenda Nguyen CoStar Analytics

Pennsylvania’s Space Optimization and Utilization Project, or SOUP, introduced in early 2025, is reshaping the Commonwealth’s office footprint in ways that carry implications for private‑sector office demand, particularly in Philadelphia and Harrisburg.

The multi‑year initiative represents the state’s first comprehensive review of its real estate portfolio. The cost-saving initiative is designed to reduce reliance on leased office space by consolidating agencies into modernized, state‑owned facilities through an implementation period extending to 2033.

The Keystone State began the lease-consolidation process in 2024 with 324 leases totaling 6.7 million square feet. The state has already shed 270,000 square feet of office space. At full execution, the Commonwealth expects to exit roughly 2 million square feet of leased office space across the state, achieving a 30% reduction, expected to generate nearly $180 million in cumulative lease savings through 2033, including approximately $14 million in Greater Philadelphia and roughly $166 million across 15 counties in Central Pennsylvania.







While these cost savings are fiscally meaningful for the state, they translate into an additional hit on office demand, particularly in markets where government occupancy has historically provided stable, long‑term demand.

Philadelphia is absorbing this shift amid challenging office conditions. In April, office availability across Center City hovered near 18%, while suburban office vacancy had settled around 16%, reflecting several years of negative absorption as tenants worked to right-size their office footprints.

Against this backdrop, the phased exit of state agencies from leased space introduces incremental availability into a market already contending with excess supply, particularly among Class B and C assets that have historically relied on public‑sector tenancy.

While trophy and top‑tier Class A buildings have demonstrated relative resilience amid a continued flight‑to‑quality, office properties favored by government tenants face greater concession pressure and longer timelines to secure replacement tenants, if any at all.

The implications of SOUP are even more acute in Harrisburg, where the state government has long played a stabilizing role in office demand. Office vacancy in the region remains comparatively low—generally in the high‑single‑digit range—but this stability is partially tied to the state’s outsized occupancy of office space in the region.

Pennsylvania’s move toward denser layouts, shared workspaces and hoteling occupancy patterns mirrors broader private‑sector trends, reinforcing the reality that fewer square feet per employee will be required going forward.

For Philadelphia and Harrisburg office landlords alike, the state’s consolidation strategy adds more pressure to already bifurcated office markets as the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania steadily contracts its leased office space through 2033.

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Ace American Insurance Co. renews large office lease on New Jersey waterfront

 By Linda Moss CoStar News

An anchor tenant at a Hudson River waterfront office tower owned by Manulife US Real Estate Investment Trust has extended the lease for its 117,280 square feet of space.

Philadelphia-based Ace American Insurance Co. signed a 65-month lease extension for 10 Exchange Place in Jersey City, New Jersey, according to landlord Manulife, a Singapore-listed real estate investment trust.

The deal will move back Ace's lease expiration from December 2029 to May 2035, Manulife said Thursday. The tenant will retain its entire 117,280 square feet of space at the same rental rate, the REIT said. Ace has been a major tenant at the 740,354-square-foot office high-rise, known as Exchange, since Manulife acquired the property in 2017. It paid $315.1 million for the building, according to CoStar data.

Global insurer Ace contributed 5.4% of Manulife's total gross rental income as of Dec. 31 last year and is the landlord's fourth-largest tenant. E-commerce giant Amazon has also recently renewed its lease for office space at Exchange, according to Manulife.

“We remain focused on prioritizing high-quality tenants and executing accretive leasing strategies that strengthen portfolio fundamentals over the long term,” John Casasante, Manulife's CEO and chief investment officer, said in a statement.

The Hudson waterfront continues to attract major financial services and multinational tenants due to its proximity to Manhattan and lower rents. While the pace of leasing activity in the Hudson waterfront office market has moderated in the first quarter, asking rents have remained resilient year-on-year as total office inventory continues to hold steady

www.omegare.com

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

Fusion Gyms takes former H&M space at Shops at 69th Street

 By Vivian Peregrino CoStar Research

Fusion Gyms, a popular, no-contract fitness chain with five locations across Philadelphia and Bucks County, has signed a lease to open a sixth location at 2 S. 69th St. in Upper Darby, Pennsylvania, where it will occupy just under 26,000 square feet across the ground, second, and third floors of The McClatchy Building.

The distinctive Art Deco structure is part of the Shops at 69th Street, an outdoor retail destination near the 69th Street transit hub owned by New York-based Ashkenazy Acquisition Corp. The shopping center spans multiple blocks and is home to a mix of national and local retailers. Fusion Gyms will be occupying space formerly occupied by fast-fashion clothing chain H&M.

Fusion Theaters, a related business owned by the same owner of Fusion Gyms, also leased space in the Shops at 69th Street for its debut location. The new movie theatre and arcade games concept leased a 41,000-square-foot space next to Five Below in the open-air shopping mall.

The new theater space will be located near the former Tower Theater concert venue, which remains available and slated for redevelopment.

www.omegare.com

Thursday, April 16, 2026

How AI is changing the office market

 By Katie Burke CoStar News

While artificial intelligence could automate much of the workplace, leading to fewer workers and less office space, it's also prompting the creation of companies that are major users of real estate.

ChatGPT maker OpenAI, Anthropic, Nvidia, Databricks and other AI companies have collectively become the largest pursuers of space across the U.S. market, helping to lower record-high levels of office availability and leading a post-pandemic recovery. That is despite other major companies, such as tech giant Amazon, choosing to cut their expansive footprints.

Against this shifting landscape, no one knows whether AI will lead to a commercial real estate boom or bust — or both. Just as the technology is acting "as a catalyst for both growth and decline" in the job market, it can have differing effects on office property.

"AI brings augmentation of human capabilities to a new level, fostering significant productivity gains and creating new job functions. As the composition of office work changes, so too will space requirements, workplace design and tenant demand."

Seattle-based Amazon, for one, is allowing leases to expire, temporarily suspending, or "hibernating," activities at some offices, and subleasing or terminating deals for hubs that have become largely vacant, Senior Real Estate Manager Martha Schwarzkopf Doyle said at a Global Real Estate and Facilities team meeting earlier this year.

"As it relates to how AI companies are going to affect other companies in terms of their leasing, that's the million-dollar question."

But for now, office landlords are sharpening their focus on Class A offices — the nicest and newest properties with tenant perks you can't find online — as they say there will be winners and losers in the wake of this shift toward automation, just as there was during the pandemic.

AI industry's real estate growth

Among the country's largest cities, commercial leasing generated by AI and tech companies accounted for about 20% of the total volume last year, the most of any industry.

That has been especially pronounced in tech hubs such as the San Francisco Bay Area, where AI firms have accounted for half of the major leases signed since the start of 2026. The activity has boosted their collective footprint well beyond 5 million square feet of office space, a presence expected to surge to at least 15 million square feet over the next four years.

"In previous tech booms, most of the capital companies raised went to hiring and expanding their workforce, but the big difference this time around with the AI sector is that they're spending a large amount of funding on infrastructure. The AI industry is in the office five, six days a week, and many are already starting to open additional offices in cities like Seattle, Boston and London. It has so far led to a lot of economic growth."

While they may start with a small office between 3,000 square feet and 5,000 square feet, AI firms and startups have been quick to tack on additional space, often within a matter of months, said Mike McCarthy, a Transwestern broker who has worked on a number of deals with such tenants. Especially as companies close additional funding rounds and bulk up their workforces, those spatial requirements are accelerating to 20,000 square feet, 40,000 square feet or, in some recent cases, full-building deals.

There has been "a tremendous amount of new business formation and growth, much of which is coming on the back of what's happened with AI over the last few years," Kilory Realty CEO Angela Aman told analysts on the landlord's latest earnings call. "We have AI tenants we've signed deals with that are already talking about expansion and growth, and there are a lot of additional new companies in the market thinking about taking additional space."

The CEO went on to say the AI-fueled boost, while only one part of how the technology is changing real estate, is creating "an exciting dynamic" that extends far beyond the most concentrated tech hubs, as the demand has helped prop up the broader national office market.

Braced for impact

At the same time, companies outside of the AI industry are using the technology to streamline their workforces, making cuts that have office market stakeholders watching for any sign of a potential bust.

Layoffs among corporate giants such as Salesforce, Meta, Workday and Pinterest in recent months have cast a pall over the market, as companies have attributed the cuts to their growing use of AI and a broader push to automate more traditional office roles.

Payments company Block, for example, unveiled plans in February to slash its workforce by at least 40%, a move CEO Jack Dorsey attributed to technology that has improved to the point where it's possible to do more with far fewer people.

"Intelligence tools have changed what it means to build and run a company," Dorsey said in public remarks about the planned cuts. "A significantly smaller team using the tools we're building can do more and do it better."

Still, the link between AI-related efficiency gains, layoffs and potential office real estate cuts remains tenuous. Some have questioned whether AI is an excuse for some CEOs to make cuts when a business doesn't want to admit it isn't generating enough revenue to justify its current spending.

Yet some of the nation's largest landlords, including Kilroy, Cousins Properties, Vornado Realty Trust and BXP, have been watching for any sign that the link between AI and reduced workforces is beginning to solidify — and translate into smaller space requirements.

They've found that, at least for now, tenants appear willing to commit to space, just as long as it's at the highest end of the market.

Bifurcated future

A flight-to-quality shift that took off in the earlier years of the pandemic, when companies began turning to high-end space to help entice staff to give up remote work and return to the office, has become permanently embedded in the national leasing landscape. Demand for trophy and premium properties far outpaces the desire by firms for aging, older alternatives.

"What we've been articulating for a couple of years is that AI is going to create jobs and it's also going to disrupt jobs that are more back office and processing," BXP CEO Owen Thomas said at Citi's Miami Global Property CEO Conference last month. "Our portfolio is geared towards that first group of employees, and that's what we're seeing."

So far, preliminary data backs up the job-creation effect of AI. Across the country, AI-related job postings have outpaced those for traditional tech roles, a sign that the technology is becoming more integrated across a broadening range of services and industries, Avison Young's Thibault said.

Moreover, it's an early indicator of the types of positions that will be formed to accommodate the AI boom as more companies race to adopt the technology.

"At the end of the day we might see certain industries and jobs go away, but historically we've always seen those jobs get replaced by something that requires new skills," Thibault said. "Folks behind typewriters that used to fill entire floors in office buildings went away but then were replaced by folks behind computers. Don't see AI, especially looking back historically, replacing all of the workers we have in office buildings today."

Committed to space

In the wake of the pandemic, which sent office vacancy rates to record highs and valuations to near lows, some office investors pulled out of the property type to focus on more lucrative investments, such as multifamily or healthcare.

Others converted some outdated offices entirely. For the first time in years, the rate of office demolitions and conversions has overtaken new development, according to CBRE and CoStar research.

Now, AI holds the potential to further accelerate changes in the office market, creating sharper winners and losers.

Based on the leasing trajectory in BXP's own portfolio, Thomas said demand for premium office properties remains firmly on the upswing.

Average lease sizes have climbed as terms are extended, the executive said, the clearest indicator that the need for physical office space isn't at any immediate risk.

"If a company was worried about AI, why are they in 2025 signing 10-year leases with us?" Thomas said, adding that, with the deals BXP has signed so far this year, the average terms have been even longer. "These are major financial commitments, and they're signing long-term leases, so I don't think they're forecasting big impacts AI will have on their space demand."

The outcome for older, more commodity properties is expected to be far bleaker, however, with AI technology expected to eliminate the need for many back-office and support roles that typically occupy those types of buildings.

Yet the pandemic had already determined the fate of those properties, and the increased adoption of AI is simply expected to deliver one of the final blows.

That means BXP is honing its focus on "upping the portfolio quality even further and getting even bigger in the gateway markets where we operate," Thomas said. "So yes, AI will absolutely have an impact, but that's why our strategy is taking an even narrower path."

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Wednesday, April 15, 2026

Philadelphia’s medical office sector finding its footing after a rocky stretch

 By Brenda Nguyen CoStar Analytics


After going through a period of reduced leasing from its recent peak, Philadelphia’s medical office market is regaining balance as the spring season begins. While vacancy has edged higher over the past year, an increase in recent leasing activity suggests the sector is finding its footing.

Medical office vacancy for the Philadelphia region stood at a low of 8.1% at the end of 2024, supported by sustained healthcare demand and a constrained pipeline of new speculative development. As of April 2026, vacancy has risen modestly to 9.1%.

However, the vacancy rate has held within a narrow range—between 9.0% and 9.1%—for three consecutive quarters, signaling early signs of stabilization after a brief adjustment period.

Recent leasing activity underscores the sector’s resilience. In January, Virtua Health renewed an 11,600-square-foot lease in Camden County, reinforcing its long-term commitment to the region. Within Philadelphia proper, a 14,000-square-foot medical office lease in Holmesburg reflects continued demand for neighborhood-based healthcare space. These lease transactions stand out given that the average medical office lease size in 2025 was approximately 2,860 square feet, suggesting growing confidence among larger healthcare tenants.

Although vacancy has inched up, Philadelphia remains strongly positioned within the national healthcare real estate landscape. The region’s robust healthcare foundation, anchored by major healthcare institutions and hospital systems, continues to generate steady demand. At the same time, the expanding life sciences sector adds complementary strength, supporting a broad mix of clinical, research, and outpatient facilities.

Together, these factors indicate that Philadelphia’s medical office market is returning to a more stable phase, supported by steady demand from healthcare providers and selective growth in life sciences-linked space.