Critical Issues for Retailers in Vertical Mixed-Use Projects

Introduction. Retailers leasing space in mixed-use projects encounter critical issues that might be of little or no concern in traditional shopping centers. Vertical mixed-use projects (multi-story buildings with subterranean parking or attached parking structures, one or more floors of retail at the base, and offices, apartments or condominiums above) present even greater challenges. This article addresses some of these issues and offers practical suggestions for their resolution.

Background.  The complexity inherent in vertical mixed-use project leasing reflects both the manner in which such projects are subdivided (separate legal parcels created by horizontal planes are stacked upon each other like layers of a wedding cake) and the competing concerns of the different users of the project (e.g., retailers may prefer early-morning or late-evening deliveries, but residents may be disturbed by the noise generated by large trucks). Horizontal subdivision gives developers the flexibility to sell or lease parking areas to third-party operators in order to help finance the project or to form joint ventures with well-known residential builders for development and marketing of luxury apartments or condominiums. As a result, the project will be subject to one or more sets of covenants, conditions and restrictions designed to allow the project to operate as a fully-integrated community despite the separation of ownership interests and competing expectations and demands of occupants. Additional restrictions may be contained in a development agreement between the developer and a redevelopment agency or other governmental authority exercising control over the project, or in a conditional use permit issued in connection with a zoning variance.                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                            

Site Plan. Unlike the single-page site plan attached to most shopping center leases, the site plan for a vertical mixed-use project consists of multiple pages showing parking levels, retail levels, and other relevant areas; paths of travel between the retail stores and the office and residential components; shared facilities such as loading docks, trash areas, and delivery storage areas; access and visibility corridors, no-build areas, and restricted-use zones; sign areas reserved to tenant or  to landlord; reserved and restricted parking areas; valet drop-off points; and any other areas that are difficult to describe by narrative.  A thorough review of the lease and the site plan should be made to confirm that all lease references to the site plan are reflected on the site plan, and that all areas outlined on the site plan are referenced in the lease. Subsequent to lease execution, changes to the site plan may be required in order to reflect the needs of new tenants or demands of governmental agencies. Although material changes should be subject to the reasonable approval of any tenant with a signed lease, the tenant should understand that the mixed-use project is a work in process until final permits are issued and that the price of being unwilling to include some flexibility in its lease for future site plan modifications may be that its lease gets put on the back-burner, resulting in loss of negotiating leverage and raising the possibility that it may be replaced by a more cooperative tenant.

Parking. One of the most difficult aspects of developing and managing a mixed-use project is the allocation of parking spaces in a manner that satisfies the needs of retail customers and employees, office workers and visitors, and residents and guests. The need to satisfy increased parking demands of holiday shoppers during November and December provides a further complication. A retailer expects its customers to find parking near a mall or store entrance without delay and to be directed to its store by appropriate signage. An adequate number of spaces in defined areas must be reserved for the exclusive use of retail customers. Nights and weekends, retail customers should have access to unreserved office parking spaces. Restaurants will want spaces reserved for customers picking up take-out orders.

Retailers of all sizes will demand that landlords provide free or reduced-rate for customers or provide a system for point-of-sale validation either with or without a purchase; the success of these demands will be determined by prevailing market forces, but retailers should understand that developers view the parking areas as a profit center, and projected revenues may be relied upon by lenders. If valet parking is provided, a conveniently located drop-off area should be identified and a specified area of the garage or parking structure should be reserved for valet-parked cars. Employee parking may be limited or subject to monthly charges; this issue should be addressed as early as possible because most retailers are accustomed to unlimited free parking for employees in traditional shopping centers.

 Tenants should be cautious of provisions that allow access to parking areas to be restricted or for parking areas to be closed for “special events” or “periodic street fairs.” A “special event” may not benefit all or even a majority of tenants; parking structures may be closed and tented for movie premieres or corporate charity events. “Periodic” street fairs and farmers’ markets may occur weekly. Each tenant will have to balance the benefit conferred by the increase in foot traffic against the detriment caused by the loss of parking and the street closure. If the project is near a stadium, arena, theater, convention center or other venue, the landlord may attempt to set aside parking that it or its third-party operator can sell to patrons of those venues at premium rates; again, each tenant will have to evaluate the net benefit of such an arrangement.

Marketing.          Retail tenants in mixed-use projects have a large pool of potential customers on the office and residential floors above them. This is especially beneficial for restaurants. But it may be difficult to market to office workers and residential occupants because retail leases for mixed-use projects often prohibit distribution of flyers, coupons and other advertising media within the project. More acceptable methods of building a customer base may include sponsoring social gatherings within the project, offering incentives to customers who refer other staff or residents of the building, providing delivery and catering services within the project, and being included on any project directories, signs, electronic displays or other joint advertising media. 

Phased Construction.     The retail floors of a high-rise mixed use project are often completed before the office and residential floors. If construction on the exterior of the building is complete, the garage is finished and accessible from adjacent public streets, and there are no impediments to customers’ use of common areas to access the retail areas, then the construction of interior tenant improvements is unlikely to disrupt retail operations. However, to the extent a retailer is counting on the patronage of residents and office workers in order to meet sales goals, it may be prudent to delay rent commencement until occupancy rates in the office and residential components have reached specified levels.  If a retailer must open while work is being completed, then staging areas for storing equipment and materials and for performing finish work should be limited to areas delineated on a site plan attached to the lease. Any construction immediately above, below or adjacent to a retail tenant that creates noise or vibration should be performed outside of Tenant’s business hours. 

Signs. The urban location and large footprint of vertical mixed-use projects allow for many signs to be placed around the exterior of the building, including blade signs outside each shop, large signs on the facades identifying anchor tenants, Landlord’s signs offering office and residential space for lease, and, if permitted by local regulations, video screens and electronic billboards capable of displaying multiple advertisements. The retail tenants in the project should have the right to be represented on such signs, and the landlord should not be allowed to show ads of competitors of such tenants. In addition, there should be a prohibition on placement of signs that would obscure a retail tenant’s signs; this requires a protected area that is three-dimensional to account for hanging signs and signs that draw attention away from the protected signs.

Common Area Maintenance Costs.         Allocating CAM expenses in a vertical mixed-use project is a challenge for a landlord, and determining if the allocation is reasonable is an even bigger challenge for a tenant. The retail lease should provide for an initial allocation to be made among the retail, office and residential components of the project, and then for the amount allocated to the retail component to be sub-allocated among the stores and restaurants on either a pro-rata basis or pursuant to a formula designed to separate different levels of use. Given the discretion afforded to landlords in these situations, it is important for the tenant to secure the right to perform annual audits of landlord’s books and records as they relate to CAM expenses for the entire project. The landlord may attempt to limit the audit to expenses concerning only the retail component, but a determination of the appropriateness of the allocation to the retail component cannot be made in a vacuum.  However, in fairness to the landlord, the retail tenant has no reason to examine costs that were not included in its CAM expenses for the year in question.  It is important to remember that retailers pay a straight pass-through of CAM expenses, whereas office tenants typically pay only increases over a base year, and apartment tenants pay a gross rent with actual expenses absorbed by landlords. Landlords have an incentive to place as much of the CAM expense as possible onto the retail component due to the complete pass-through of those expenses to the retailers. Parking fees collected by landlord should be applied against parking garage and structure operating, repair and maintenance costs, with only the balance of unrecovered costs included in CAM expenses.                                    

Delivery Issues.  Retail tenants in vertical mixed-use projects may be required to share loading docks with other retailers as well as with moving vans and office supply trucks. Demand for dock space may require that trucks be unloaded more quickly than in traditional shopping centers. The retailer may want to negotiate for secure storage space in the dock area; this allows for merchandise to be removed from trucks immediately and then protected until employees can safely transfer items from the dock to the store. If the only path of travel from the loading area to the store is through common areas, retailers may consider requiring the landlord to provide a security guard escort in order to clear a path. Restrictions on hours of deliveries should be carefully reviewed; these restrictions may prove particularly problematic for restaurants receiving perishable foods such as fish or produce from a supplier distributing to multiple customers.  The delivery restrictions should not apply to FedEx, UPS or other carriers whose hours are beyond tenant’s control.

Summary. As suburban sprawl reaches its limits in many areas, and as so-called “affordable” housing requires the homeowner to commute an hour or more to work, vertical mixed-use projects concentrated in urban areas are providing people with the opportunity to live, work and shop without getting anywhere near a crowded freeway. The concept is nothing new for New York City or Chicago, but for many areas such as Southern California where the solution to increased housing demand for the last hundred years has been to extend the freeway another mile and turn more farms into tract homes, the shift in thinking about quality of life issues has raised new challenges for retailers planning growth strategies. City planners are revising plan approval criteria to force multi-unit residential projects to include retail components. While the suburban shopping centers seem safe bets as they are repositioned as “lifestyle centers,” everyone on the retailer’s team must be prepared for the increasing importance of urban mixed-use locations in the retailer’s portfolio.

Retail Tenants Adjust to Mixed-Use and Lifestyle Centers

If you haven’t been to the mall recently, you might not recognize it. The traditional enclosed shopping center is undergoing a major transformation. Empty department stores are being reconfigured or demolished, parking structures are being built to free up surface parking areas for development, and outdoor lifestyle centers are being constructed as extensions of enclosed mall areas. Big box tenants are relocating stores from nearby strip centers and power centers and learning to live with theaters, health clubs, restaurants, and other parking-intensive uses that they previously shunned. Bewildered mall tenants are reading their leases and discovering that their “exclusives” don’t apply outside the enclosed mall or that they allow the Landlord to lease to competitors for the price of a partial rent abatement. Attorneys, brokers and in-house real estate advisors representing retailers in shopping center leasing transactions must focus on some new issues in order to obtain a lease that anticipates this new environment.


1. As parking is shifted to multi-level structures to allow development of surface lots, tenants must protect those parking areas, both old and new, which it determines are of key importance. The requirement to maintain an overall parking ratio at the shopping center will remain important, but perhaps equally important is requiring Landlord to protect the parking areas most convenient for customers of the demised premises. In mixed-use projects, make sure zones for retail customers, residents and guests, and office workers and visitors, are clearly established. If you are operating a restaurant on a pad near the residential or office component of a mixed-use project, it is imperative that your parking field is off limits to residents and tenants of such component, and that you have the right to have violators towed. If valet parking is provided, designate where the valets may park the cars. If the center is near a stadium, arena, fairgrounds or similar venue, determine whether patrons of the venue may park at the Shopping Center.


2. Signage. There are many areas of the mall available for signage. Mall directories, center court, directional signs, electronic message boards. Make sure tenant is treated at least as favorably as any other similarly sized tenant at the Shopping Center.


3. In a multi-level center, protect access routes from common areas to premises both horizontally (between points on same level) and vertically (from lower and higher levels). Escalator and elevator locations should be protected, with some flexibility for Landlord to relocate within area shown.


4. Protect access and visibility from carts, kiosks, ATM’s and other obstructions; these are a fact of life, but try to get the Landlord to agree to a zone around your premises that will be free of them. Also protect access and visibility during mall remodeling; construction barricades and detours can make stores invisible or undesirable to all but the most loyal of customers. Construct a remedy that requires the Landlord to reimburse lost sales based upon sales for similar periods during prior years; a rent abatement will not adequately compensate a retailer buried in a construction area. Require Landlord to paint your logo on “open during construction” signs on barricades and on temporary signage along paths of travel between your premises and other portions of the mall.  

 
5. Make certain you have a clear understanding of what the Landlord owns or controls and exactly what portion of the development is included in the definition of “Shopping Center.” If an area is marked “not a part of shopping center” on a site plan, is it because Landlord does not own or control that area or because the Landlord arbitrarily decided it was “not a part.” If you are in “Phase 2” of a project, determine whether Phase 1 is included in the definition of Shopping Center, and if not, consider whether any of your protections need to apply to Phase 1. Department store uses may be out of Landlord’s control now, but your client’s exclusives should apply to such premises if and when control of the same reverts to Landlord.

Hollywood Palladium Saved From Wrecking Ball

Thanks to the vigilance of local presevation group Hollywood Heritage, the historic Hollywood Palladium theater has been saved from demolition.  The Los Angeles City Planning Department seems to have forgotten that a 1986 ordinance protects hundreds of historic structures within the Hollywood neighborhood; but in their defense it is only recently that developers have been willing to take a chance on new construction in the dilapidated area and so planners may be unfamiliar with the ordinance. The t nightclub and ballroom has been leased to Live Nation, operator of numerous other historic venues as well as the House of Blues chain.  Live Nation will renovate the venue to its former glory, and it will be the centerpiece of a large lifestyle center being built around it.. 

The Palladium opened in 1940 with a Frank Sinatra concert and in 1960 its stage and dance floor became home to the Lawrence Welk Show.  It has played host to the Academy Awards as well as the Emmy Awards and Grammy Awards, and has been used in numerous films (including The Blues Brothers) and television shows (most recently American Idol).  The Palladium was a major concert venue before arenas and stadiums took over, and still is in demand for private parties and other events.  When it opened, the Palladium was believed to be the world's largest nightclub.  Morrissey will perform ten shows between October 1 and October 13 and then the venue will be closed for renovation; Morrisey's former band, The Smiths, debuted at The Palladium in 1985.

Smoking Ban Enforcement by Landlords and Tenants

With so many new studies and information emerging regarding the health and financial effects of smoking and second-hand smoke, many states and localities have strengthened their anti-smoking laws. As a result, both Landlords and Tenant must educate themselves on their state, city and county current anti-smoking laws.

In California, smoking is banned in all workplaces and within 20 feet of any door or window of a government building (including any building not owned but leased by a government entity and any public building leased to a private entity). Many cities have enacted even more strict laws. In 2006, for example, Calabasas, California enacted possibly the most severe smoking restriction in the country. Under this ordinance, smoking is forbidden in all indoor and outdoor public places, common areas of multi-unit residential buildings, and even open areas of hotels, bars, and restaurants. 

On May 1, 2007, a new Arizona law went into effect which banned smoking in all workplaces, including restaurants and bars. The statute also prohibits smoking in enclosed areas, public places and areas within 20 feet of any retail or commercial building.

Owners and property managers must try to stay on top of any new laws which affect how they manage and control their center. The smoking laws of many states require that very specific types of signs be posted, ashtrays be removed and that any offender be notified of his or her illegal behavior and requested to stop immediately. 

Besides being an additional compliance burden for the Landlord, it can also be a tenant headache. If the tenant controls any patio or other outdoor area, or if the tenant operates in a state where smoking is prohibited within 20 feet of any business entrance, then policing smokers becomes a tenant responsibility as well. Many municipalities' laws provide for a fine or citation for each violation, and if the party in control of the area does not comply with the statute, it can be fined and cited - not just the smoker. Also important to note is that a tenant could easily be in default under its lease for noncompliance with applicable law. Tenants should be especially wary if their leases contain any provision which takes away any of their rights (e.g., options to extend, etc.) should they, at any point during the lease, be in default under the lease, even if such default is timely cured.

Developers and Local Residents Clash Over Southern California Development

All across Southern California, the battle over the size, location and scale of development continues.

Santa Monica

In 2004, Santa Monica residents blocked Macerich's plans for redeveloping the three-story, 570,000 square-foot Santa Monica Place Shopping Center and replacing it with three 21-story condominiums, retail, restaurants and offices. Macerich has recently scaled back plans for the center, providing for the same footprint as the original building, but with an open air center, a third floor dining deck overlooking the ocean and a more open, village-like feel to connect to the Third Street Promenade. In March, Macerich submitted this plan to the City of Santa Monica and has received relatively positive initial reaction from the community. The approval process is expected to continue through this summer. 

Sherman Oaks

In the Sherman Oaks area of Los Angeles, Westfield has recently proposed expanding the 867,000 square foot Westfield Fashion Square by 280,000 square feet, adding 80 new stores, expanding and remodeling the food court, adding a 5-story parking garage and updating the exterior. Although many area residents dissatisfied with the out –of-date center are thrilled with idea, a significant opposition has formed, concerned with increases in traffic to the center, particularly on the weekends and holidays. The next step is an Environment Impact Report assessing the expansion and a public hearing where the local community may voice their concerns and/or support for the expansion.

Should a Retail or Commercial Tenant Get Title Insurance?

As with everything else in law, the answer is, that depends. Title insurance protects against (1) any flaw, fraud or other defect in the chain of title on a particular property (i.e., forgery on a deed, incapacity by the person who signed a previous deed, lack of authorization to convey the property, etc.), (2) any unpaid real estate taxes or liens (except those shown as exceptions to the policy), and (3) in the 2006 ALTA title policy, any problem on the property which would be disclosed by a survey (except those specified as exceptions to the policy). Although the likelihood of one of these events occurring is small, the outcome is so catastrophic, including loss of ownership of the property or loss of leasehold, that it is generally a good idea to get a title insurance policy. It is worth noting, however, that title insurance only covers defects in title from the date of your policy backward. If a mechanics' lien is placed on a property after the date of the policy, you will not be covered by the policy.

Large Shopping Center Tenants

Many retail tenants of large shopping centers feel that leasehold title insurance is unnecessary. Particularly in a large shopping center with an owner like Westfield or General Growth (especially if the center is financed) a tenant may reasonably expect that the landlord and lender have done their homework to ensure that title is in order. On the extremely rare chance that there is a defect that did show up on the title policy, the landlord's title company will indemnify the landlord for the cost of fixing it (up to the amount of the policy).

Other Tenants

If, however, a tenant is entering into a ground lease, a lease at a small center or a lease of a single building, it is advisable to get title insurance to ensure that the tenant will not lose the building or other improvements it has invested in or lose out on a good location.

Cost of Title Insurance

It is a common complaint that the title policy premiums are expensive given how rarely a claim is paid by the insurer. The bulk of title insurance costs arise from prevention and research, rather than for paying claims. If a tenant is not interested in purchasing a title policy, it should at least review a recent title report to confirm that their landlord is the current fee owner of the property and that there are no liens, over due taxes or other items which could cause the tenant problems later on. There is usually a small fee to receive a Preliminary Title Report, but it is worth it to know what you may be getting into before a long term lease is signed.

Ill-Suited Lease Forms Cost Tenants

Strip mall or single-tenant building landlords often rely on pre-printed lease forms in an effort to keep costs down and simplify leasing. For some properties this works well enough, but only where the type of tenants are well suited to the lease form. Many landlords attempt to use an industrial tenant lease form for a restaurant, for example, or a single-tenant lease form for a multi-tenant building, resulting in an ill-fitted lease where the tenant suffers. In an industrial tenant lease, such as the AIR Industrial/Commercial Tenant Lease form, the tenant typically pays for any malfunction or failure of the HVAC system after the first 6 months of the Lease, and all "other elements" of the premises after 30 days. In addition, this form requires the tenant to share in the cost prorata of any capital improvement for the entire Project or Building. Particularly if this is small strip mall with two or three tenants, this cost could be enough to put the tenant out of business. Similarly, in a single-tenant lease form, the tenant is often required to replace and maintain all of the building systems, roof, exterior of the building, etc. Tenants of a multi-tenant building with shared building systems, roof and building exterior should share such maintenance and typically, the Landlord would replace such items (perhaps with the cost amortized over the useful life) and pass portions of the cost through to all of the tenants annually. An inappropriate Lease form could easily cost a tenant thousands of dollars over the lease term.

Ventura County Development Pushes Ahead

Despite some local opposition, large developments in Ventura County are moving ahead to add homes, businesses and local attractions to the area. On May 8, 2007, Santa Paula voters approved plans to amend the city's general plan to include the neighboring Adams Canyon area. This measure paves the way for the development of up to 495 large homes, an 18-hole golf course and a 200-room hotel and spa. Santa Paula is located 65 miles northwest of Los Angeles and 14 miles east of Ventura. In Oxnard, redevelopment and expansion of the Channel Islands Harbor is pushing ahead, notwithstanding some local resistance (including a lawsuit currently on appeal). Ventura County, which owns the harbor, has been working with developers to add new homes, renovate and expand marinas and redevelop the wharf with new restaurants, stores and hotels. Two new housing developments alone will collectively include over 1,000 new homes (including town houses and condominiums). Greystar Real Estate Partners is planning to demolish existing businesses (Casa Sirena hotel and Lobster Trap restaurant) and replace them with new restaurants, retail stores and hotels. Although not all area residents are happy with the change, many residents are hopeful that the aging, neglected harbor will be revitalized by the development and raise the value of their area homes.

Gregory W. Griggs, Los Angeles Times, Santa Paula OKs Twice-Defeated Luxury Housing, May 10, 2007; Gary Polakovic, Los Angeles Tmes, Harbor Makeover Sails Ahead, May 7, 2007

Key Issues Regarding Tenant Improvements

Most commercial leases require some level of costruction or remodeling to make the leased premises suitable for the tenant.  The following are some key issues to consider when entering into a lease that requires construction or remideling:

  • What type of shell is being delivered? Is the Landlord going to demolish the prior tenant's build-out? If so, is the Landlord delivering the space vanilla shell or build-to-suit? Does the lease contain detailed descriptions of the scope of each party's required work?
  • Tenant Improvement Allowance: How much, how and when is it paid, is it enough? If the tenant does not use the full TI allowance, can Tenant keep the unused amount?
  • Does the TI Allowance cover architecture and engineering fees, or just contractors, subcontractors and materials?
  • Can the tenant keep any of the existing improvements of the prior tenant (i.e., the HVAC unit)?
  • What type of Landlord review of Tenant plans is required? When are plans due to the Landlord? How long does the Landlord have to review them before getting back to the Tenant?
  • Does Tenant's construction have to be completed by a certain time? If so, are there penalties incurred if not completed by this deadline?
  • Does the Landlord get paid an administrative fee to review the construction (frequently 15%)? Is the Landlord paid an additional fee to review plans?
  • Is the Tenant required to use union labor?
  • Is the Tenant required to get its general contractor approved in advance or does the Landlord get to choose the contractor?
  • Does the Tenant Improvement Allowance have to be paid back to the Landlord if there is any default under the Lease? If so, is it a full reimbursement or is it amortized over the lease term?

Include Early Exit Strategies in Leases to Handle Permit and Construction Delays

At the beginning of lease negotiations, landlord and tenant are typically enthusiastic about the project and are eager to move forward. Following the conclusion of a successful negotiation however, if construction of either the entire center or tenant's premises is involved, this enthusiasm can quickly turn into animosity. It is often said that construction typically takes twice as long and costs twice as much as planned, yet many parties fail to address that issue in their lease. 

If the landlord is performing construction work before delivering the premises to the tenant, then the lease should clearly set forth benchmark dates by which landlord must secure permits and approvals, commence construction, and complete construction. If any of those deadlines are not met, then tenant should have the right to terminate the lease and to recover liquidated damages on account of the significant time and money spent in due diligence, permitting, tenant improvements and attorneys fees. Deadlines should be subject to extension for events beyond the control of Landlord and for delays caused by tenant or tenant's agents or contractors.

The landlord should also have a termination right if it is unable to obtain all required permits and approvals, or if the conditions attached to governmental approval render the project too expensive, or if the construction project gets bogged down in litigation with opponents of the project. The landlord should protect itself when constructing or remodeling the premises for a specific tenant to be as clear and precise as possible in the lease as to what improvements and finishes are to be used and exactly where they are to be located.

The lease should also provide tenant with the right to terminate if tenant does not receive all permits required to conduct its business within a reasonable time. This right should also include at least a 30 day extension option if tenant is close, but has not received its permits.