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South Florida Industrial Development: Multi-Tenant Properties Take Center Stage in New Construction

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Date:
08 Dec 2025
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South Florida’s industrial development is increasingly focused on multi-tenant properties, as builders respond to slowing absorption in the large single-tenant sector and heightened demand for smaller, flexible industrial spaces. According to Jason Abitbol, Senior Investment Advisor at APEX Capital Realty, developers are shifting priorities to align with current market realities.

Current Development Assessment

Absorption rates for large, single-tenant industrial buildings have slowed, leaving existing inventory sufficient to meet demand in that segment. “There has been, from what I’ve seen, a bit of an absorption problem with the larger box products. The single-tenant, 100,000-square-foot-plus product can be accommodated with the existing inventory in the market. But the multi-tenant, small bay type product, is flourishing,” said Abitbol, who has completed over $100 million in multi-tenant industrial transactions.

This clear preference for smaller spaces is driving developers to rethink project designs, focusing on properties that can accommodate multiple tenants and a range of business sizes.

Geographic Development Patterns

The move toward multi-tenant construction is especially evident in South Florida’s northwest submarkets, where lower land costs allow builders to achieve strong rental rates without the high acquisition expenses seen closer to urban cores. “Land prices are cheaper, and the demand can sometimes be just as strong in terms of rental rates,” Abitbol explained. As a result, approximately 90% of new industrial development is targeting these more cost-effective areas.

Developers are leveraging this geographic advantage to meet robust demand while maximizing returns on new projects.

Risk Management Strategy

Multi-tenant properties offer developers a way to manage risk by diversifying their tenant base. “The more a developer hedges their bets by having a property with a lot of tenants, the better. It’s a better situation for developers nowadays,” Abitbol said. By spreading occupancy across multiple businesses, owners reduce their exposure to the risk of a single tenant defaulting and benefit from more stable cash flow.

Market Absorption Reality

Despite concerns about oversupply, Abitbol sees strong demand for well-designed multi-tenant spaces. “I don’t think that oversupply is a problem for multi-tenant spaces,” he said, pointing to Miami-Dade’s ongoing growth and the need for new industrial infrastructure. The market is clearly favoring flexible, multi-tenant configurations over large, single-user facilities.

Future Development Outlook

Abitbol anticipates the trend toward multi-tenant industrial projects will continue as developers recognize both the risk reduction and alignment with South Florida’s diverse business landscape. “I’m hoping that we continue to see more multi-tenant industrial development,” he said.

Strategic Implications

The dominance of multi-tenant development signals a shift in South Florida’s industrial market priorities. Flexible layouts and diversified tenant mixes are now central to successful projects, positioning the region for sustained growth as its business community expands and evolves. This focus also reflects developer confidence in South Florida’s economic future, relying on broad-based demand to support ongoing performance in the industrial sector.