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Above
Standard Tenant Improvements. Improvements that exceed the building
standard (see building standard)
Access.
All Class A and nearly all Class B buildings offer access
24 hours a day, 7 days a week, year round. Not all building services
will be available outside "building hours."
Agent.
One who acts for another as a fiduciary. A real estate license is
required to act as an agent for another in real property transactions.
Air
Conditioning. (See also "HVAC") comes in different
forms, but the choice in any one building will either be non-existent
or very limited:
- Building
Controlled.
- Tends
to be found in newer buildings in which air-conditioned
was installed as original equipment.
- Is
supplied during building hours during the "air conditioning
season." (see below) offers the tenant limited control
over their environment – sometimes not even a thermostat.
- Is
included in the rent.
- Requires
a payment for after-hours use. Prices vary enormously, from
a low of about $25 to a high of $300 or more per hour. This
is not dependent on the size of your space, but on the overall
area that has to be turned on in order to cool your space.
In many cases a "Supplemental Unit" is the best
choice in these circumstances (see below).
- Tenant-Controlled.
- Tends
to be found in older buildings that were built before the
introduction of air-conditioning.
- Runs
whenever the tenant wants it, at the temperature the tenant
wants.
- Usually
requires a unit situated in the tenant’s space.
- May
be air-cooled or connected to the building’s supply of chilled
or condenser water. Additional charges may be payable for
chilled or condenser water outside building hours and these
may be high if the system has to be turned on specially.
- Generally
runs off electricity paid for by the tenant in addition
to the rent.
- Supplemental
Units. Where a tenant is supplied with Building
Central air-conditioning during business hours, it is often
more economic to install a supplemental system for after-hours
cooling. Such a unit may be air-cooled or may be connected
(for a charge) to a 24-hour cooling tower if one exists. (Many
higher-end buildings do not permit the unsightly venting required
for air-cooled units.)
Air-Conditioning
Season. The time of year during which building air-conditioning
is turned on. Approximately May 15 to October 1, but varies from
building to building.
Anchor
tenant. A large retail tenant that draws traffic to the shopping
center.
Architect.
If you are doing anything other than moving into a ready-built
space or asking the landlord to move a couple of walls about, you
will need one. The earlier in the process that they are brought
in, the better. (See "Space Planners")
Assignment.
A transfer of an interest in real property, in the case of leasing,
the leasehold interest.
Attorney.
You will need one to translate the terms and conditions
of the business negotiations into legalese. Make sure that they
are knowledgeable about commercial leasing, or you could be buying
trouble.
Base
Rent. An amount of rent before adding any escalations.
Base
Year. Usually the first year of a lease to which future operating
expenses are compared for the purpose of calculating expense increases.
Brokerage
Commissions are normally paid by the landlord on commercial
leasing transactions.
Build-out.
The proposed construction for a new or renovated suite.
Building
Hours refers to the hours of the day during which full
building services are provided. While you may be able to gain access
to your space 24 hours a day, 7 days a week, you may receive heat/air-conditioning
only during Building Hours, the lobby may be attended only during
Building Hours, and the freight elevator may only be available during
some Building Hours. Typically Building Hours are 8 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Building
Standard refers to a set of specifications set forth by the
landlord. It will apply to paint, carpet, doors, light fixtures,
ceilings, window finishes, etc. (see "Workletter")
Capitalization.
A method of determining property value based upon income.
Capitalization
Rate. The percentage rate applied to the net income to determine
value. Also known as Cap Rate.
Certificate
of Occupancy. Issued by governing authorities certifying the
right to occupy a property.
Class
of building refers to the age, construction quality, modernity
of building systems, services and maintenance standards of a building.
In practice people’s opinion of the class of a building may differ,
and landlords are naturally inclined to inflate the class of their
buildings a notch or two. (See below for a description of classes.)
Class
A buildings are the top tier of buildings built and maintained
to the highest standard and with the most up-to-date systems. Think
chrome and glass, modern infrastructure, computerized elevators,
etc. Class A normally post-1960 construction, and rated excellent
overall. Also used subjectively to describe the quality of a building.
(See "Class of Building.")
Class
B buildings include most pre-war buildings, however fancy, although
some have been recently so thoroughly upgraded that they are now
lower-end Class A. Older, less fancy, in some cases a lot more charming.
Class B is pre-1960 construction and rated good overall. Also used
subjectively to describe the quality of a building. (See "Class
of Building.")
Class
C buildings are basically everything that doesn’t make it into
Class B. Think side-street (mostly), unattended or only partly attended
lobby, and generally more basic. Class C are older with some functional
defects. (See "Class of Building.")
Cleaning
is provided in many office buildings (and all Class A buildings)
as a service paid for in the rent. But many Class B buildings now
being promoted as office buildings were formerly loft buildings
and do not include cleaning in the rent. The value of cleaning is
about $2.50 per rentable square foot per year. This can make what
at first sight seems to be a bargain actually rather less of one.
Common
Area. Building or project areas used in common with other tenants
including service areas such as maintenance rooms, janitorial closets,
elevators, lobby etc.
Consumer
Price Index. A governmental index used in determining the cost
of goods and services. It is soften used in commercial leases to
prevent the erosion of income by escalating the rent payable annually.
Construction
Period. This is a rent-free period prior to actual occupation
of the space allowed to the tenant to build out its space. Obviously
this only applies when the tenant (as opposed to the landlord) is
organizing the construction.
Creditworthiness
is not the same as still being in business after two years.
Your creditworthiness, in the eyes of a landlord, will vary depending
on market conditions and on his needs at the time.
Default.
The failure to comply with an obligation required under the lease
contract. These usually are penalties upon default - which may or
may not be monetary.
Demising
Walls. The walls that separate one tenant from another or from
the common area.
Direct
Meter – see "Electricity"
Direct
Operating Escalation – see "Escalations"
Drop
Dead Date. The date by which, if the premises are not delivered,
the tenant may terminate the lease.
Effective
Rent. The average of all the years of the rent after deducting
any landlord concessions such as free rent or over standard tenant
improvements.
Electrical
capacity refers to the amount of power available in the premises
and is generally expressed in terms of watts per square foot. A
typical specification would be in the range of 4 to 7 watts per
rentable square foot.
Electrical
Wiring. Built space will already be wired for electricity, but
possibly not adequately for your use. If you do not negotiate for
the landlord to carry out any further wiring, it will be your responsibility
to install it. Raw space will not be internally wired, and again
the wiring of the space will be subject to negotiation as part of
any Workletter, or will be your responsibility as tenant.
Electricity
is delivered:
- Via
Direct Meter. This way you pay what is on the meter
direct to the utility company.
- Via
Submeter. This way you pay the landlord what
is on the meter plus a percentage "handling" fee
(typically 10%). This is not always more expensive than a
Direct Meter, as the landlord of a large building may be able
to negotiate better rates than you can on your own.
- As
Rent Inclusion. This way you pay a fixed annual charge
per rentable square foot. Typically this will be in the range
of $2.90 to $3.50.
Escalations
come in two basic flavors:
- Real
Estate Taxes. Almost all leases
have these. Tenants pay their "proportionate share"
of any increase in Real Estate taxes over a base year approximately
equal to the first year of their tenancy.
- Operating
Expenses. This is where the creativity comes
in. The theory is that as it gets more expensive to run the
building, so tenants pays their part of that increase. Now
let's see what they’ve come up with:
- Direct
Operating Expenses. The best for the tenant in times
of low inflation. If operating expenses go up, the tenant
pays his "proportionate share." If they don’t,
he doesn’t pay. Often hard for a small tenant to get.
- Porter’s
Wage Formula. For every penny the porter’s hourly wage
goes up, so proportionately does the rent per square foot
- most commonly "penny-for-penny". Thus if the
porters’ wages go up from $15 per hour to $17 per hour,
the rent goes up $2 per square foot. Not so bad in times
of low wage inflation, this can have a serious ratchet effect
when the opposite is the case, out of all proportion to
the actual increase in operating costs of which the porters’
wage is only a part. The effects can be particularly grim
if the formula includes fringe benefits. Less punitive in
percentage terms when the original rent is a relatively
high number.
- Percentage.
Increasingly common, and quite unpleasant. 3% compounded
over a 10 year term adds up. We have even heard of people
asking for 4%. Indeed, people have even been known to pay
it.
- Consumer
Price Index. Self-explanatory.
Clearly a crap-shoot, like everything apart from Direct
Operating Expenses. Tends to be attached to a straight percent
minimum.
Estoppel
Certificate. A certification by tenant that the lease is full
force and effect and confirms the economics of the lease.
Expense
Stop. Used to cap the amount the landlord is willing to pay
to cover a particular expense or group of expenses such as operating
expenses.
Financials.
The landlord will require full financial and general information
about your company before agreeing to terms or drawing a lease.
You may have competition for your chosen space, so assemble this
information before you get to the stage of making a proposal.
It is in your interests to provide as much detail as possible in
order to convince the landlord that you are a creditworthy prospective
tenant or for him to assess your likelihood of success if you are
a startup. Make sure that it is neatly presented and is fully comprehensible
to someone who knows nothing about your business, and, preferably,
that it is expressed in dollars. Audited statements carry vastly
more weight than something that you put together on Quickbooks the
day you send it in. Do not expect the landlord to spend hours trying
to understand ill-presented financials- he will move on to the next
proposal instead. And do not attempt to conceal the true situation
of your company.
First
Right of Refusal. Grants a tenant the first right to match an
offer to buy or lease a property or premises, or refuse such an
offer. after an offer has been tendered by a third party.
Free
Rent. Depending on market conditions, it may be possible
to negotiate a period of free rent. In a landlord’s market this
may be as little as one month; in a tenant’s market as much as a
year, or even more on a long lease. If it is more than a month or
two, the abatements will normally be spread over the term of the
lease. (See "Construction Period")
Full
Service Rent. An all inclusive rent covering rent, operating
expenses, taxes and lessor's insurance, subject to escalations when
these expenses increase after the first year of the lease.
Good
Guy Clause. This is a form of personal Guarantee whereby
the guarantor undertakes to pay any unpaid rent so long as the tenant
remains in possession of the premises. It is therefore less onerous
than a full guarantee where the guarantor undertakes to pay the
rent for the full term of the lease whether or not the tenant remains
in possession.
Gross
lease. A gross lease, as distinguished from a "Net Lease,"
includes real estate taxes, heating and building services in the
base rent. Office and loft leases are nearly always of this type.
(See "Net Lease")
Gross
Rental Rate. Quoted either as a fixed dollar amount per month
or per year or based on an amount per square foot per month or per
year. The rate is usually quoted with a base year for realty taxes
and operating costs. Some buildings quote rates on a sem-gross basis.
Heating.
Typically office buildings provide central heat during "building
hours" in the "heating season" and residual heat
during cold weather. (See "Building Hours;" "Heating
Season;" and "HVAC")
Heating
Season typically runs from October 1 to May 14th
(the inverse of the Air-Conditioning Season).
High
Rise. 25 story building or greater.
Hold
Over Tenant. A tenant in possession after the lease term expiration.
HVAC.
Heating, Ventilating and Air-Conditioning. (See "Air-Conditioning"
and "Heating.")
Landlord’s
Work describes any building or decorating work carried out in
the space by the landlord at his expense prior to the tenant’s occupation
of the space. It is totally negotiable. The agreement that governs
this is called the "Workletter" and is an integral part
of the lease. It can run the gamut from nothing at all to a full
build-out of the space, depending on market conditions. It can be
set up in either of two basic ways:
- The
Landlord builds the space out using his own contractors. You
can elect to have more than the basic work done, in which
case you will pay the extra.
- You
build out the space, and the landlord either gives you a cash
contribution to the work, or free rent in lieu of the cash.
In
the end the tenant pays for the work, and the landlord amortizes
the cost over the term of the lease. If you ask for a lot of work,
therefore, the landlord will be less flexible when negotiating the
rent, and may look for a larger security deposit. (See "Workletter,
" "New Building Installation" and "Building
Standard")
Lease
Terms are typically 3, 5, 10 or 15 years, but there are no rules.
The longer the term the more time the landlord has to amortize expenses,
and the more concessions he will be likely to concede.
Loss
Factor. This is the difference between "Rentable Square
Feet" (the area for which the tenant pays) and "Usable
Square Feet" (the carpetable area which the tenant actually
occupies) expressed as a percentage of the Rentable Square Feet.
The Loss Factor was originally intended to represent the tenant’s
share of the common areas of the building, including the lobby,
elevator shafts, common corridors, risers, freight entrance, etc.
In a few buildings it still does this fairly accurately. But in
New York there is no law laying down the criteria for calculating
the Loss Factor, so many landlords have been unable to resist the
temptation to be creative and are constrained only by the pressures
of the market. You cannot negotiate the Loss Factor.
Low
Rise. Building with six stories or less.
Master
Lease. The controlling lease covering a property, may control
a subsequent lease or leases such as a sublease or assigned lease.
Mid
Rise. Seven to 24 story buildings.
Mixed
use Project. More than one use within a project such as office
and retail; office and hotel; office and apartments; retail and
apartments.
Mullions.
Material used to divide window lines to allow for the attachment
of walls in creating rooms.
Net
Lease. A Net Lease is one where the tenant takes on the entire
responsibility for the payment of all the expenses of running a
property in addition to the payment of rent, including maintenance
costs, real-estate and other taxes, wages, etc. The opposite of
a Net Lease is a "Gross Lease," and Net Leases are generally
only encountered in cases that involve the renting of entire buildings
or of condominium units. (See "Gross Lease")
Net
Rental Rate. he base rental cost expressed in dollars per square
foot per year. The net rate does not represent the total rental
cost. Realty taxes and operating costs must be added in order to
arrive at the total cost per square foot for the space. Some landlords
quote on net net or sometimes triple net.
New
Building Installation describes the building out of a piece
of space to "Building Standard." In general it is implied
that this will be carried out by the landlord at his expense, before
the commencement date of the lease. (See "Building Standard")
Non-competition
Clause. Prevents the owner from leasing space to another tenant
that competes with an existing tenant.
Non-Disturbance.
Protects a tenant from loss of its premises in the event of default
by another party. If the owner is foreclosed, a non-disturbance
agreement from the lender protects the tenant. If a sub-lessor defaults
on a lease, non-disturbance agreement from the owner protects the
sub-tenant.
Notice
of Lease Term Commencement. A document executed between owner
and tenant defining the actual date the lease commenced, which may
or may not define a new expiration date.
Novation.
To make new, such as a new lease agreement in lieu of a sublease
or assignment of a lease.
Options.
New York City has always been a market in which it has been
more difficult for tenants to negotiate options and other rights
to renew and/or expand than in other markets around the country.
Parking
Ratio. The number of parking spaces available per 1,000 square
feet of space leases, or for an entire project.
Pass-throughs.
Operating expenses and/or tax increases paid by tenant under agreement
are said to be passed-through to tenant.
Porter’s
Wage Formula – see "Escalations"
Prebuilt.
Prebuilt spaces have been built out speculatively with generic layouts
and are ready for immediate occupancy. Can be a good quick solution
if your needs are fairly standard.
Proportionate
Share generally refers to your space’s area expressed
as a percentage of the total rentable square feet in the building.
In practice, sadly, if you add up all the proportionate shares in
a building you are unlikely to arrive at a total equal to or less
than 100%. What a surprise.
Proposal.
When you wish to make an offer on a space we, as your brokers, will
draw up a non-binding proposal, which we will submit on your behalf.
As a minimum it will specify the following:
Tenant
Building
Space
Rentable
Square Feet
Rent
Per Square Foot
Term
Lease
Commencement
Rent
Commencement
The
way the electricity will be paid for
Escalations
R&D
Building. A combination of office and production space as might
be used for research and development.
Real
Estate Taxes. All Real Estate Taxes are included in
the base rent at the start of the lease. In almost all cases, leases
include an escalation clause stipulating that the tenant will pay
its proportionate share of Real Estate Tax increases in future years.
(See "Escalations").
References
-- See "Financials."
Renewal
Option. Grants the tenant the right but not the obligation to
renew under specified terms and conditions.
Rent
– Rent is expressed in dollars per rentable square foot per annum
(See "Rentable Square Feet.") At the beginning of the
term it will normally include all real estate taxes and the operating
costs of the building. In many office buildings it will also include
cleaning, which is worth $2.50 to $3 per square foot per year. It
will almost invariably include heat in the winter, and may or may
not include Air conditioning in the summer. It will probably not
include electricity. In loft buildings sprinkler and garbage removal
charges may be additional. Rent will be subject to escalations,
which will normally kick in one year after commencement. Where the
term is longer than 5 years, there are likely also to be one or
more "Rent Bumps" during the course of the term. (See
"Air Conditioning," "Electricity" and "Escalations")
Rent
Bump – describes an increase in the rent which is built
in to the lease. For example a ten year lease may have a rent of
$40 for years 1 through 5, and $45 for years 6 through 10
Rent
Reviews – see "Escalations."
Rentable
Square Feet – is the area on which your rental payment
is based. What you actually get is "Usable Square Feet."
The difference between the two is called the "Loss Factor"
and is expressed as a percentage of the "Rentable Square Feet."
(See also "Loss Factor")
Security
Deposit. A deposit made by a tenant to a landlord to secure
tenant's promise to perform its obligations under the lease. Unless
you are a long-established, rock solid, profitable company with
significant assets and a long history of paying rent on time, you
will almost certainly have to provide one. Landlords are inconsistent
on this, and may ask for as little as three months’ rent, or as
much as a year’s. Maybe we can negotiate a "burn down"
whereby it is reduced over a period of years after an initial period,
but don’t rely on it. Deposits can be in the form of a Letter of
Credit, which are more attractive to the sophisticated landlord
as they do not constitute assets in the event the tenant declares
bankruptcy.
Space
Plan. The preliminary space design defining the tenant's space
requirements, often includes furniture layouts.
Space
Planners earn their crust by helping you get the maximum possible
use out of your space as built.
Square
Footage – comes in two varieties: "Rentable Square
Feet" and "Usable Square Feet." The difference between
them is called the "Loss Factor" and can be over 30%.
See the separate entries for details.
Subleasing.
You will want your lease to contain as liberal a sublease provision
as possible. Generally landlords retain the right to turn down subtenants
if they think that they are insufficiently financially sound or
if their use is inappropriate to the building. Often they will include
provisions allowing them to "recapture" the premises if
the tenant approaches them for permission to sublet, or to take
all or part of any profit that may result from an increase in the
rent. Clearly a landlord is more likely to recapture during a period
of rising rents, and consequently sublet spaces are much less frequently
available during such periods.
Submeter
– see "Electricity"
Tenant
Improvements. Improvements made to a property to make the space
suitable for the tenant's intended use, whether paid for by landlord
or tenant.
Usable
Square Feet – What you actually occupy. (See "Rentable
Square Feet" and "Loss Factor")
Voice
and data wiring. Generally speaking the tenant
is responsible for this, although in some cases outlets may have
already been installed (but not necessarily wired.)
Workletter.
A list of the quantity and type of component parts that will be
used to construct tenant improvements, usually provided by landlord
to secure a tenant for a property. The Workletter is the part of
the lease describing in greater or lesser detail the work that the
landlord will carry out in the space prior to its occupation by
the tenant. It’s value is expressed in terms of $ per rentable square
foot . This must be negotiated at the stage of the initial proposal.
The value of the Workletter will rise and fall depending on the
strength of the market and the creditworthiness of the tenant. (See
"Landlord’s Work")
Working
Drawings. A complete set of plans, normally developed after
lease execution, defining the precise layout and construction of
the premises, suitable for obtaining permit and true costs.
Zoning.
A method used by government to regulate the use of property in a
given area or zone. A set of ordinances controlling use.
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