Despite
online shopping shaking up Miami-Dade County’s retail landscape, a new report
shows brick-and-mortar vacancy rates fell to a record low in the third quarter.
The
report, authored by brokerage Colliers International, states that retail
tenants chewed through 483,730 square feet of space during the third quarter,
bringing Miami-Dade’s vacancy rate down 0.1 percent to a record low of 2.9
percent.
As a
result, the county’s average asking rent rose from $33.27 per square foot in
the third quarter of 2015 to $33.60 per square foot this year.
For
retailers, Miami’s two most popular submarkets were the Biscayne Corridor,
which saw 54,752 square feet of leases inked, followed by neighborhoods
surrounding the Miami International Airport, where 35,226 square feet were
absorbed, according to the report.
While
the Zika scare hurt retailers in
terms of foot traffic, leasing activity appears not to have suffered. Colliers
pointed out that absorption in Wynwood and
Miami Beach, the two original Zika transmission zones, hit 229,718 square feet
during the third quarter, representing nearly half of the county’s overall
leasing activity.
Those
tight vacancies and increasing rents have pushed developers to ratchet up
deliveries. According to the report, more than 2.3 million square feet of
retail space is under construction in Miami-Dade. — Sean
Stewart-Muniz
Original Content The
Real Deal
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