Commercial Property/Business
Centers; Modern Office for Rent: Daily Rates Available
By JOHN HOLUSHA/ NY times
Published: Sunday, May 20,
2001
The illusion is quite convincing.
The lobby is spacious, with a staffed reception desk, a waiting area
with comfortable seating and wide hallways. If a call comes in for the
XYZ Corporation, the operator answers, ''Thank you for calling the XYZ
Corporation.''
There are conference rooms
for meetings with clients, file cabinets with digital locks and word
processing and other support services. If a visitor arrives, he or she
is escorted to an office for a meeting.
But what appears to be an bastion
of Corporate America may only be a 150-square-foot office rented for
a few weeks or months. This is an executive
office suite, the modern
version of the serviced
office spaces that have
been around for about the last 30 years.
A professional
Manhattan business center
converts the fixed costs of entering into a long-term lease, designing
and building space, acquiring telecommunications and computer equipment
and hiring a staff into a variable cost for clients who use the offices
for short-term renewable periods. The rental rate for such space is
higher than for raw space and all services are additional expenses,
but a client has the advantage of buying what it needs and no more.
others in the business say
larger companies are being attracted to executive
suites because they allow
them to conserve capital.
''The executive
office suite business has
been around for about 30 years and evolved from call-answering centers
for traveling salesman,'' said Gary Kusin, chief executive of HQ, which
is largely owned by the Frontline Capital Group, an affiliate of Reckson
Associates Realty, a real estate investment trust based in Melville,
N.Y..
He said the business changed
in the mid-1990's toward one that is more service oriented because of
three factors. First, he said, was improvement in communications technology,
which allowed executives to be based closer to customers and farther
from headquarters. Another consideration, he said, was the globalization
of business, which required offices around the world. Finally, he said,
there was the trend of outsourcing noncore operations, including traditional office
space and the associated
services.
''That is what converted executives office suites to office services,'' he said.
A New
York business center operator
typically leases space on a long-term basis from a landlord and subdivides
for clients or enters into a joint venture with the building's owner,
which conserves capital and allows more rapid expansion. The serviced office space is fitted out with offices as small
as 150 square feet, which would otherwise be difficult to find. Instead
of a thick, complicated lease, the space is rented on a license agreement,
like a hotel room, and can be paid for by a credit card.
THE offices are furnished and
equipped for telecommunications and Internet access. Typically, the
rental rate is higher for short-term occupancies than longer ones, but
if an executive needs an office for a few hours to conduct job interviews
in a given city, New
York business center executives
say, they are prepared to accommodate him.
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