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If you haven’t negotiated a favorable holdover clause in your lease with a tenant, you may end up getting stuck with low rent and high costs if it won’t move out of the space when its lease term is over. That’s because to get rid of a tenant that doesn’t move out when its lease ends, you may have to start an expensive, time-consuming eviction proceeding. And the trouble doesn’t stop there: If you’ve already re-rented the space, the ne...
In the excitement and administrative hustle and bustle of redeveloping their centers, some owners discover they’ve overlooked one very important aspect of the redevelopment—namely, making sure that the overall look of the updated center isn’t interfered with by tenants. To require your tenants to conform their signage to your redeveloped center’s new signage criteria, your leases should take into account the potential for center redevelopment.
Responsibility for mold-related damage in commercial and residential properties has become a hot-button issue in the past decade, as major storms like Hurricane Sandy have increased the potential for flooding and subsequent mold growth, and as tenants have become more aware of environmental issues. Things like indoor air quality (IAQ) that previously weren’t on tenants’ radar may play a role in whether they choose a certain space over another. After all, ten...
Competing with other nearby centers to draw in customers can be tough. You’re in a much better position if you have high-profile tenants that make your center a destination for customers looking for these particular stores. But no matter what type of center you own, you’ll want to let potential customers know which stores are at your property.
An owner is typically responsible for maintaining the common areas of its building or center, so if someone is injured in these areas, the owner is the party that will most likely have to pay for damages from an accident. If the accident was caused by a condition stemming from the actions of your property manager or its employees or some other condition that could have been controlled, this might seem fair to you.
Typically, when an owner agrees to allow a tenant to assign or sublet its space, it uses lease provisions that require the tenant to give it some or all of its profits from any sublet or assignment. If your lease says that these profits include the sale of any of the tenant’s personal property, namely furniture and equipment, you might think that you’ve covered all your bases and that the tenant must pay you under those circumstances.
Shopping centers have been benefiting from a proliferation of kiosks and carts selling everything from hair styling tools to cell phone accessories to skin care products. Why have kiosks taken off in recent years? Kiosks have a low cost but a great potential to reap benefits. The cost of renting to a kiosk as compared to an in-line store is minimal. In fact, you can charge a high minimum fee. And, because a kiosk needs only a small amount of space, it can afford to pay ...
If you have a multiplex movie theater tenant in your center, you’ll want it to show the latest popular movies so that it will attract crowds. That’s because movie crowds create foot traffic and other sales at your center. The whole center can benefit from this type of tenant. And a tenant like this could potentially pay you lots of percentage rent. In this scenario, everybody wins. Or do they? Not if your lease contains a loophole that wipes out these benefi...
Some of your office building tenants that are only halfway through their lease terms may already be complaining that their space is looking shabby and the rent they'll be paying during the last few years of their leases will be higher than the outdated space will be worth at that point. For example, the rent at year seven of their 10-year leases won't reflect the reality of peeling paint and frayed and stained carpeting. They may already have negotiated an agree...
Although most leases give tenants the right to a rent abatement when their office or retail space becomes unusable after a fire, flood, or similar casualty, they fail to adequately define when the abatement period will end. Merely saying that the abatement period will continue until the space is no longer “unusable” is vague, and gives the tenant ammunition to take advantage of you. Plug this loophole by placing limits in your lease specifying how long the a...