LIIHm'?xm'xr Ef?gy? Wfl/ DOWNTOWN JACKSONVILLE LETTER FROM MAYOR LENNY CURRY Jacksonville is a city on the rise, a fact that is clearly demonstrated in our evergrowing Downtown. Economic momentum throughout Jacksonville, specifically in our Downtown corridor, remains a top priority for my administration. Public and private investment in our city center is at its highest levels in decades. VyStar Credit Union relocated its headquarters and 1,200 employees to Downtown Jacksonville, while JEA and FIS are developing a combined 462,000 square foot footprint of office space for their new headquarters. Mixed use projects like The Barnett, Laura St. Trio, The Ambassador Hotel, and Independent Life Insurance Building are breathing new life into Downtown’s historic buildings. Development projects underway total nearly $3 billion and our riverfront is poised for generational change with multiple catalytic projects, including the Ford on Bay and Lot J. Last year, Downtown saw more than 20 million visitors drawn to Downtown’s 15 culture and entertainment venues, five sports teams, four major medical facilities, three college campuses, numerous restaurants and shops, and various events and conventions. Cultural gems like The Florida Theatre and the Museum of Science & History are embarking on multimillion-dollar renovations to further enhance the Downtown experience. More and more people are choosing to live Downtown for the atmosphere, entertainment options and walkability. Since last year’s report, the number of Downtown residents is up 18%, and the number of units is up 20% with four new multifamily properties opened, and 652 more units under construction. We are expected to see even more growth in the coming years thanks to the Downtown Investment Authority’s Food and Beverage Retail Enhancement and Storefront Façade Grant programs which aim to create an even more lively and vibrant Downtown. Downtown is on an excellent trajectory. I look forward to further strengthening the heart of our vibrant city and maximizing the potential of our bold Downtown. Sincerely, Lenny Curry Mayor of Jacksonville COJ.NET 2 Entirely focused on Downtown Jacksonville, the Downtown Investment Authority (DIA) works on behalf of the City of Jacksonville to stimulate investment in the central core, facilitate job creation and increase residential density. Through capital investments, planning, advocacy, marketing and the establishment of policy, the DIA has simplified the approval process for Downtown development and uses planning and economic development policies to promote design for healthy living and a modern, mixed-use Downtown. DOWNTOWN INVESTMENT AUTHORITY 117 W. Duval Street #310 Jacksonville, FL 32202 (904) 255-5302 DIA.COJ.NET INVESTDTJAX.COM Ron Moody Board Chair Craig Gibbs, Esq. Immediate Past Board Chair Lori N. Boyer CEO Downtown Vision, Inc. (DVI) is the non-profit Business Improvement District (BID) for Downtown Jacksonville. Created in 2000, Downtown Vision is led by a 27-person board of directors representing Downtown stakeholders, from small and large property owners to residents and businesses to partner agencies. Downtown Vision’s mission is to create and support a vibrant downtown community and promote Downtown as an exciting place to live, work, visit and invest. DOWNTOWN VISION 214 N. Hogan Street #120 Jacksonville, FL 32202 (904) 634-0303 DTJAX.COM Numa Saisselin Board Chair Jacob A. Gordon, Esq. CEO 3 DOWNTOWN AT A GLANCE 3.9 90 64 SQUARE MILES OF DOWNTOWN BLOCK BUSINESS IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT BLOCK HISTORIC DISTRICT 3 7.5M 14.2% $21.67 56K FORTUNE 500 HEADQUARTERS SQ FT OF OFFICE SPACE (More than 30% of the market) VACANCY AVERAGE LEASE RATE / SQ. FT. EMPLOYEES (54% live within 10 miles of Downtown) 6,100 RESIDENTS (up 18%) 3,850 MULTIFAMILY UNITS (up 20%) 25 MULTIFAMILY PROPERTIES 646 NEW UNITS (2019-2020) 652 UNITS UNDER CONSTRUCTION $530M $2.9B $3.1B IN COMPLETED 2019-2020 PROJECTS IN UNDER CONSTRUCTION PROJECTS IN PROPOSED PROJECTS DTJAX.COM 4 20 2,361 15 5 4 3 2.8 MILLION+ VISITS ANNUALLY HOTEL ROOMS (6 hotels under construction & proposed) CULTURE AND ENTERTAINMENT VENUES MAJOR SPORTS TEAMS MAJOR MEDICAL FACILITIES COLLEGE CAMPUSES MILES OF RIVERWALK PROMENADE Southbank Riverwalk TABLE OF CONTENTS Jacksonville, Florida's First Coast......................... 6-7 Downtown Diversity..............................................8-9 Live Downtown..................................................10-12 Downtown Eds & Meds.......................................... 13 Work Downtown................................................ 14-17 Retail Ready........................................................ 18-19 Visit Downtown................................................. 20-21 Invest Downtown.............................................. 22-27 Downtown Investment Authority.................. 28-29 Transportation & Infrastructure..................... 30-33 The Center of Tourism........................................... 34 Art on Display...........................................................35 Business Improvement District.......................36-37 Board & Staff........................................................... 38 Credits.......................................................................39 A NOTE ABOUT COVID-19 Information provided in this report is drawn from data gathered prior to the impact of the Covid-19 pandemic. Like every major metro area, Downtown Jacksonville has experienced a decline in activity since March 2020. While the recovery timeline is unknown, we continue to see a strong interest in investing in Downtown and expect we will return stronger than ever. 5 85+ 220 NONSTOP FLIGHTS DAYS OF SUNSHINE Largest URBAN PARK SYSTEM IN THE NATION CONTAINER PORT IN FLORIDA 3 3 INTERSTATES RAIL NETWORKS JACKSONVILLE, FLORIDA'S FIRST COAST Jacksonville is distinguished by a growing population, strong economy, diverse culture and recreational opportunities and abundant natural resources making it one of the nation’s most dynamic cities. At 874 square miles, Jacksonville is the largest city by land area in the continental U.S. as a result of the 1968 consolidation of Jacksonville and Duval County. By population, Jacksonville is the 12th largest U.S. city and the Jacksonville MSA has a population of more than 1.5 million across five counties in Northeast Florida. Regional collaboration is strong and our economic base is diverse. Top industries include advanced manufacturing, transportation and logistics, financial services, IT and innovation, and health and biomedical. Florida’s favorable tax environment benefits both businesses and individuals with no corporate franchise tax, state personal income tax, inventory tax, or foreign income tax. Locally, Jacksonville’s consolidated government means a streamlined permitting process. Businesses also enjoy low operating costs, strong broadband infrastructure, and a highly skilled, low-cost workforce. As “America’s logistics center,” Jacksonville serves as a gateway to Florida and a major distribution point for goods being transported throughout the eastern seaboard and to the Midwest. Serviced by three major rail networks and three interstates, Jacksonville sits at the crossroads of the Southeast’s rail and highway network. The deep-water port is the number one container port complex in Florida and one of the nation’s top vehicle handling ports. In addition, Jacksonville International Airport offers more than 85 nonstop flights and connections to every major city in the world. The region boasts one of the lowest overall costs of living and some of the most affordable housing prices in the Sunshine State. Home to top-rated K-12 schools and excellent colleges and universities, the region cultivates a wealth of young, experienced talent. Residents enjoy big-city arts and entertainment amenities, a hearty dose of Southern charm, and plenty of outdoor recreation options, including ninety miles of shoreline and the largest urban park system in the nation. 6 #1 90 MILES OF BEACHES & SHORES JACKSONVILLE IS:  A Top 10 Best Place to Live on the Coast – Coastal Living, 2020  #7 for Where the Jobs Will Be in 2020 Forbes, 2020  #4 City Where People Moved to in 2019 – Hire A Helper, 2020  In the Top 15 Cities for Women in Tech – SmartAsset, 2020  #4 Best City for Job Seekers Forbes, 2019  A Top 10 hottest city in the housing market – Zillow/CBS News, 2019  A Top 20 Best Tech Cities for IT Jobs – CompTIA, 2019  #1 City for Talent Attraction EMSI, 2019  A Top 20 City for Emerging Tech Markets to Watch – Site Selection Group, 2019  The Fastest Growing Florida City U.S. Census Report, 2019  Top 20 Best Cities to Eat in America Food & Wine, 2018  #9 Best Big City to Live in Right Now Money, 2018  #5 Best City for Millennials SmartAsset, 2018 CENTRAL TO EVERYTHING IN NORTHEAST FLORIDA JAX INT'L AIRPORT  GEORGIA  FERNANDINA BEACH & AMELIA ISLAND ATLANTIC OCEAN   95  295 NORTHSIDE MAYPORT NAVAL AIR STATION DOWNTOWN JACKSONVILLE  10 ARLINGTON & INTRACOASTAL WESTSIDE ST. JOHNS RIVER ATLANTIC & NEPTUNE BEACHES ST. JOHNS TOWN CENTER Intracostal Waterway JAX BEACH  JTB/202 JAX NAVAL AIR STATION SOUTHSIDE & MANDARIN  295  ORANGE PARK & CLAY CO.  ORLANDO TPC SAWGRASS  PONTE VEDRA, ST. AUGUSTINE & ST. JOHNS CO.  95 JACKSONVILLE: A MARKET TO WATCH The Urban Land Institute (ULI)—the oldest and largest network of cross-disciplinary real estate and land use experts in the world—is bullish on Jacksonville. ULI's Emerging Trends in Real Estate® 2020 Report, ranked Jacksonville 23rd in markets to watch based on overall real estate prospects, up from 48th place in 2019. According to real estate professionals surveyed: “ ‘This market offers the best of both worlds, with the suburbs allowing [for] quality of life with easy access to the "big city." Boosters see great potential in the central business district: ‘Downtown Jacksonville is a relatively clean canvas for development.’ The public is increasingly more supportive of downtown, observing, ‘You can’t be a suburb of nowhere.’ And, as to capital flows, local experts believe that ‘it is now Jacksonville’s time for investment and growth,’ with ‘larger capital sources finally starting to look here.’ ” Additional findings from the Emerging Trends Report include: STRONG ECONOMY  The cost of doing business is 1.4% lower than the national average.  Real per-capita income is $49,576 and expected to grow 11.8% faster than the national average over the next five years. ATTAINABLE HOUSING  2020 median home prices are 13.9% lower in Jacksonville than the national average.  Affordability index, the percentage of the median home price that can be purchased with the median household income in the market, is 3.5% higher in Jacksonville than the national average.  Rent as a percentage of household income is 40.4% lower than the national average. 7 DOWNTOWN DIVERSITY As the heart of the arts, history, business, innovation, and civic engagement in Northeast Florida, Downtown Jacksonville is in the middle of it all. Office and residential towers flank nearly six miles of beautiful waterfront along the St. Johns River. With a daytime population of 67,000 and more than 6,100 calling Downtown home, employees and residents cite walkability, culture, entertainment, and the city atmosphere as the best things about the Downtown experience. Getting to and from Downtown is easy with direct access via Interstates 10 and 95, and 40% of Downtwn’s employees enjoy commute times of 20 minutes or less. For travelers, Downtown is a quick 15-mile drive to the Jacksonville International Airport. Downtown falls under a singular Commercial Central Business District (CCBD) zone to allow for a dense mixture of uses. The City of Jacksonville’s Downtown Investment Authority (DIA) guides and incentivizes investment, job creation, and residential density throughout Downtown, while the Business Improvement District (BID) provides Downtown with clean and safe services and stakeholder support in the 90-block central business district. CHURCH CATHEDRAL SPORTS & ENTERTAINMENT LAVILLA BROOKLYN WORKING WATERFRONT CENTRAL CORE SOUTHBANK DOWNTOWN BOUNDARY (CRA) BID BOUNDARY HISTORIC DISTRICT Downtown received a Historic District designation through the National Park Service's National Register of Historic Places in 2016. The district encompasses 64 blocks in the Central Core, Cathedral and Church District. According to the designation:  This particular area contains a contiguous group of resources that relate to the development of Downtown Jacksonville as a commercial, institutional, and residential hub for the city following the Great Fire of May 3, 1901. The contributing resources host a number of uses such as single family and multi-family dwellings, commercial business, financial institutions, social and religious activities and government operations. The architectural styles include Frame and Masonry Vernacular, Prairie and Chicago School, Colonial Revival, Mediterranean Revival, Neoclassical Revival, Beaux Arts, Renaissance Revival, Gothic Revival, Romanesque Revival, Modernist, and others.  8 EIGHT DOWNTOWN DISTRICTS BROOKLYN. Modern and colorful, Brooklyn connects the Central Core to the historic Riverside neighborhood and Five Points shopping and dining district. Home to major headquarters, such as Black Knight Financial, FIS, Florida Blue, Haskell and TIAA Bank, Brooklyn offers an ideal location for businesses and residents alike. The district has a mix of uses, including riverfront office, multi-family housing, restaurants, retail and light industrial. The community enjoys plentiful river access, and with various major projects under way, Brooklyn is well positioned for continued growth and success.   LAVILLA. As Jacksonville’s oldest suburb, LaVilla was known as the Harlem of the South and the epicenter of black culture and commerce in Northeast Florida, as well as Jacksonville’s railroad hub. Following a decline in population and quality of life in the 20th Century, the The River City Renaissance (RCR) Plan aimed to revitalize the area in the 1990s, making room for future development through the acquisition and clearing of many acres. Development stalled for nearly thirty years, but recently, redevelopment has returned in the form of new workforce housing and transportation projects. The 2019 LaVilla Neighborhood Development Strategy calls for a LaVilla Heritage Trail for pedestrians and bicycles and a Water Street road diet to connect the historic district to the riverfront. sale and multiple adaptive reuse projects underway to bring residential, retail and a hotel to the district.  CATHEDRAL. Anchored by five historic churches, the Cathedral District connects the Central Core to the Sports & Entertainment District and is home to Billy Goat Hill, the highest point in Jacksonville. Beginning in 2016, the area has been championed by Cathedral District Jax-Inc. (CD-J), a nonprofit organized to foster growth as Jacksonville's Downtown neighborhood by supporting development and revitalization efforts.  SPORTS & ENTERTAINMENT. The biggest concentration of entertainment venues in Northeast Florida, the Sports & Entertainment District is home to five sports teams, major concerts, the annual Jacksonville Fair and much more. The district was once home to a thriving maritime industry, its riverfront lined with shipyards. Today, major mixed-use developments are planned to bring residents, employees, and visitors to the area.  WORKING WATERFRONT. The Working Waterfront sits on the eastern edge of Downtown. Home to the North Florida Shipyards, the district primarily supports industrial waterfront uses with a special district zoning overlay to accommodate the needs of shipping, lumber, concrete, oil and similar businesses operating there.  CENTRAL CORE. Jacksonville was founded on the SOUTHBANK. Home to tall riverfront office and residential towers, the Southbank sits between the St. Johns River and the San Marco neighborhood to the south. It features a wealth of hotels and premier medical campuses including Baptist Medical Center, Wolfson Children’s Hospital, MD Anderson Cancer Center and Nemours Specialty Care center. The community enjoys plentiful riverfront access via the Southbank riverwalk, a boat ramp, kayak launch, and River Taxi stops.  CHURCH. Situated along the northern boundary  The Cathedral District and the Sports & Entertainment District were designated as “Opportunity Zones” that offer investors tax breaks designed to encourage economic development in economically distressed areas created as part of the federal Tax Cuts and Jobs Act of 2017. riverbank of the Central Core and its small walkable blocks are filled with historic architecture, cultural amenities and public art. The district encompasses much of Downtown’s office towers, government services, regional non-profits, and various art and cultural centers. Today, work continues on key riverfront properties to enhance Jacksonville’s iconic skyline. The availability of several unique and historic properties provide significant opportunities for adaptive reuse. of Downtown between the Central Core and the historic Springfield neighborhood, the district is at the onset of a major transition. Drawing its name from the multi-block First Baptist Church of Jacksonville campus, the area is ripe for redevelopment, with eight contiguous blocks currently for  9 The Townhomes at Berkman Plaza Downtown living is on the rise, drawing in Baby Boomers, Millennials and Gen Z'ers looking to dwell amid unique dining and nightlife, world-class museums, sports and entertainment events, and public art. From 2015 to 2020, Downtown has seen a 66% increase in multifamily residential units. Nearly 650 new apartments have opened since the start of 2019 including Lofts at Jefferson Station, Downtown’s first transitoriented housing development in LaVilla. Downtown’s 3,851 residential units boast a 94% average occupancy rate. More than 6,137 residents now live in 25 multifamily properties, up 18% from last year. Downtown can expect approximately 1,040 additional residents once the 652 units under construction come online, bringing Downtown nearly three-quarters of the way towards its goal of 10,000 residents. Investors are taking note of Downtown’s quick growth with many projects incorporating amenities and retail into mixeduse projects. In turn, these new amenities will drive demand, attracting and retaining even more residents. MAP OF MULTIFAMILY RESIDENCES                                        EXISTING UNDER CONSTRUCTION PROPOSED 10 YEAR INCREASE IN RESIDENTS AND UNITS 7,000  6,000  Residents 6,137 RESIDENTS Units 5,000  UP 18% FROM LAST YEAR 4,000 3,000 3,851 UNITS 2,000  UP 20% FROM LAST YEAR 1,000 0 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019  The resident count is hand-compiled by Downtown Vision using occupancy rates and units from 25 Downtown multifamily residential properties. This number does not include single-family units, transitional housing or other residents as tracked in US Census projections. 10 NEW HOUSING SUMMARY Source: Duval County Property Appraiser, Zillow and self reported. 646 NEW UNITS UNDER 652 UNITS CONSTRUCTION 4,000+ UNITS PROPOSED Residential Community Address Year Opened # Units Lease/Sale Lofts at Jefferson Station 799 Water St. 2020 133 For Lease SOBA San Marco Apartments 1444 Home St. 2019 143 For Lease Broadstone River House 1655 Prudential Dr. 2019 263 For Lease The Residences at Barnett 112 W. Adams St. 2019 107 For Lease Units Under Construction Address 225 Laura St. Apartments 225 Laura St. Elena Flats 122 E. Duval St. Lofts at Brooklyn Spruce & Jackson # Units Lease/Sale 4 For Lease 4 For Lease 133 For Lease Shipping Container Apartments 412 E. Ashley St. 18 For Lease Southbank Apartments by Ventures 841 Prudential Dr. 185 For Lease Vista Brooklyn 200 Riverside Ave. 308 For Lease Units Proposed Address Ambassador Hotel & Annex (Phase 2) 310 W. Church St. 200 For Lease Ashley Square Senior Housing 127 E. Ashley St. 120 For Lease The District Southbank 950 For Lease & Sale Doro District 128 A. P. Randolph Blvd. 247 For Lease First Baptist Block Development by EJPC / Homkor of Florida Beaver, Julia, Ashley & Hogan 170 For Lease Ford on Bay 220 & 330 E. Bay St. 520 For Lease Independent Life Insurance Building 233 W. Duval St. 200 For Lease Jones Brothers Furniture Building Hogan St. & Ashley St. JTA Southbank Residential Montana Ave. LaVilla Townhomes Adams, Johnson, Lee & Forsyth 88 For Sale Le Mesa Building 905 W. Forsyth St. 16 For Lease & Sale Lofts at the Cathedral 325 E. Duval St. 140 For Lease Lot J TIAA Bank Field adjacent 700 For Lease & Sale The Shipyards Bay St. 662 For Lease & Sale # Units Lease/Sale 28 For Lease 350 For Lease VIEW THE COMPLETE LIST OF RESIDENTIAL PROPERTIES AT LIVEDTJAX.COM. RESIDENTIAL SALES Average price: $316,400 Average price per SF: $214 Range: $98 - $329 per SF RESIDENTIAL LEASES Average rent/mo: $1,583 Range: $695 - $3,890 94% AVERAGE OCCUPANCY RATE The Residences at Barnett Broadstone River House The Residences at Barnett 11 Broadstone River House RESIDENT SURVEY Source: Downtown Vision 2019 Downtown Resident Survey 83.5% OF RESIDENTS LIKE OR LOVE LIVING DOWNTOWN. BEST THINGS ABOUT LIVING DOWNTOWN: 1 City living/atmosphere/vibe 2 Entertainment/events 3 Walkability WORST THINGS ABOUT LIVING DOWNTOWN: 1 Loitering/transient population 2 Empty storefronts/not attractive 3 Lack of a walkable grocery store Vista Brooklyn DEMOGRAPHICS Source: Placer.ai, January 1 - December 30, 2019 RENT VS. OWN: 4:1 RESIDENTS RENT 17.3% Owner occupied 82.7% Renter occupied HOUSEHOLDS: 3 OUT OF 4 ARE "NON-FAMILY" 27.1% Family Households 72.9% Non-family Households A non-family household consists of a one-person household or where the householder shares the home exclusively with people to whom he/she is not related. AGE: MORE THAN HALF OF RESIDENTS ARE BETWEEN 25-54 YEARS OLD 8.0% <18 16.9% 45-54 12.1% 18-24 11.3% 55-64 22.9% 25-34 14.3% 65+ 14.5% 35-44 EDUCATION: 56.7% OF RESIDENTS ARE COLLEGE EDUCATED 18.4% Elementary 24.9% High School Graduate 27.2% College/Associate Degree 17.5% Bachelor Degree 12.0% Advanced Degree 12 DOWNTOWN’S "EDS & MEDS" UNIVERSITY OF NORTH FLORIDA BAPTIST MEDICAL CENTER JACKSONVILLE In 2019, UNF opened the Coggin College Of Business Downtown Campus and UNF Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation in the Central Core. In 2009, contemporary art museum MOCA Jacksonville became a cultural institute of UNF. UNF is ranked nationally in National Universities, Social Mobility and Top Public Schools by U.S. News & World Report. As the central hub of the Baptist Health system, Baptist Jacksonville provides the highest level of medical and surgical care using the latest technologies, such as the roboticassisted da Vinci™ Surgical System. The medical center is ranked nationally in Diabetes & Endocrinology and Gynecology by U.S. News & World Report. FLORIDA STATE COLLEGE AT JACKSONVILLE BAPTIST MD ANDERSON CANCER CENTER The first to have a Downtown presence, FSCJ’s Downtown Campus was established in 1977. In 2018, FSCJ opened Downtown’s first dorms, 20 West Student Housing in the historic Lerner Building. Opened in 2018, Baptist MD Anderson combines the clinical breakthroughs of the number one cancer center in America and the full resources of North Florida’s largest and most preferred health system. JACKSONVILLE UNIVERSITY WOLFSON CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL JU opened the Davis College Of Business Downtown Campus, Brooks Rehabilitation College Of Healthcare Sciences, and Nathan M. Bisk Center For Professional Studies in the Central Core in 2017. JU is ranked nationally in Regional Universities South, Best Colleges for Veterans and Best Value Schools by U.S. News & World Report. EDWARD WATERS COLLEGE Located just over a mile from Downtown, EWC is Florida’s First Historically Black College. It’s ranked nationally in Regional Colleges South, Social Mobility and Historically Black Colleges and Universities by U.S. News & World Report. Part of the Baptist network, this not-for-profit hospital treats all children regardless of ability to pay. Wolfson is ranked nationally in Pediatric Cancer and Pediatric Neurology & Neurosurgery by U.S. News & World Report. NEMOURS CHILDREN’S SPECIALTY CARE Nemours works with Wolfson Children’s Hospital and other regional hospitals to provide life-changing care for children with common and complex conditions. MORE Two additional hospitals, UF Health Jacksonville and Ascension St Vincent’s Riverside Hospital are both located approximately one mile from Downtown in Springfield and Riverside respectively. WOLFSON CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL CRITICAL CARE TOWER A new, seven-story, 220,000-square-foot critical care tower will become the “new front door” to both Wolfson Children’s Hospital and Baptist Medical Center. Once open, the tower will add 92 neonatal intensive care beds and 35 pediatric intensive care beds bringing the Children’s Hospital’s total to 298 beds. Wolfson’s medical faculty includes pediatric sub-specialists with Nemours Children’s Specialty Care Jacksonville, the University of Florida College of Medicine Jacksonville and Mayo Clinic. Completion is expected in 2021. Investment: $187 million 13 Downtown is home to all of Jacksonville’s tallest buildings, three Fortune 500 Companies, 7.5 million square feet of commercial office space, more than two million square feet of government buildings, and a robust collection of historic and mid-century architecture. In 2019, VyStar Credit Union took its place in Downtown’s skyline, moving approximately 1,200 employees and its headquarters to the Central Core. The credit union is infusing its new campus with retail, public art and unique public space. Two additional headquarters projects are currently in the works: 7.5M SF OF OFFICE INVENTORY 14.2% VACANCY RATE, 2020 Q1 FIS HEADQUARTERS $21.67 AVERAGE LEASE RATE / SF, 2020 Q1 $93M IN MAJOR COMMERCIAL SALES In 2019, global fin-tech leader FIS acquired Worldpay, one of the world’s leading global eCommerce and payment technology companies, making FIS a $12 billion company with 55,000 employees. FIS is building a new, 12-story, 300,000-square-foot headquarters to support its growth in the Brooklyn District. FIS will consolidate its current headquarters and local offices and plans to hire an additional 500 employees by 2029, bringing its Jacksonville workforce to approximately 1,800 employees. Investment: $145 million 462K SF OF OFFICE SPACE PLANNED 27.5K 2020 Q1 NET ABSORPTION JEA HEADQUARTERS 56K DOWNTOWN EMPLOYEES 2,387 DOWNTOWN BUSINESSES Sources: CBRE Group, Inc., ESRI and Duval County Property Appraiser 14 Minneapolis-based Ryan Companies US Inc. is building a 162,000-square-foot headquarters for Jacksonville’s public utility in the Central Core. Ryan acquired 1.5 acres for $2.6 million in June 2019. Plans call for an adjacent 657-space garage with 10,690 square feet of activated ground floor space. The headquarters will sit on one city block, bounded by Adams, Monroe, Pearl and Julia streets adjacent to the Duval County Courthouse. JEA will lease the building from Ryan upon completion. Investment: $72.2 million NOTABLE COMMERCIAL BUILDING SALES AND SIGNIFICANT OFFICE LEASE TRANSACTION CAN BE FOUND IN APPENDIX A AT DTJAXREPORTS.COM. 2019 OFFICE SPACE BY CLASS & MARKET COMPARISON Source: CBRE, Inc. Florida Central Business Districts Total Square Footage 2019 Miami (Downtown & Brickell) 15,274,862 15.9% Downtown Tampa 6,897,722 Downtown Orlando 8,514,695 Downtown Jacksonville 7,464,197 vs. Jacksonville Suburbs 17,983,636 Source: CBRE Group, Inc. Inventory: 25% (53.6% of total) Vacancy Rate: 14.8% Average Lease Rate Per SF: $22.50 2019 Net Absorption 227,739 $44.72 7.0% 39,415 $29.46 8.3% 113,079 $28.47 14.6% 32,283 $21.59 17.5% 108,532 $19.61 17.5% JACKSONVILLE SUBURBS 20% 14.6% 15% DOWNTOWN JACKSONVILLE 10% 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 JACKSONVILLE AVERAGE LEASE RATES YEAR OVER YEAR Source: CBRE Group, Inc. UP TO $21.67 $19.61 $18 2,627,923 SF $21.59  IN 2020 Q1 $20 Inventory: DOWN TO 14.2%  IN 2020 Q1 DOWNTOWN JACKSONVILLE $22 CLASS B 2019 Average Lease Rate JACKSONVILLE OFFICE VACANCY RATES YEAR OVER YEAR CLASS A 4,201,455 SF Total Vacancy 2019 $16 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 JACKSONVILLE SUBURBS (35.2% of total) Vacancy Rate: 14.0% Average Lease Rate Per SF: $20.70 CLASS C Inventory: 634,819 SF (8.5% of total) Vacancy Rate: 15.3% Average Lease Rate Per SF: MAJOR HEADQUARTERS Source: JAXUSA Partnership, Jacksonville Business Journal Jacksonville Business Journal Office REGIONAL HEADQUARTERS EMPLOYEES Wells Fargo 3,500 Black Knight Financial Services 2,400 TIAA Bank 2,000 VyStar Credit Union 1,600 CSX Corporation 1,500 One Call Care Management 1,500 FIS 1,300 Haskell 1,350 Guidewell Source 1,300 Citizens Property Insurance 1,040 Stein Mart 1,000 Suddath Relocation Systems 800 $15.68 15 ABOUT EMPLOYEES IN AND AROUND DOWNTOWN 56,000+ DOWNTOWN EMPLOYEES WHERE DOWNTOWN EMPLOYEES LIVE DOWNTOWN EMPLOYEE SURVEY Source: Downtown Vision 2019 Downtown Employee Survey 76.1% OF EMPLOYEES LIKE OR LOVE WORKING DOWNTOWN. Source: Placer.ai, January 1–December 30, 2019 BEST THINGS ABOUT WORKING DOWNTOWN: 1 Restaurants 2 Walkability 3 Proximity to residence WORST THINGS ABOUT WORKING DOWNTOWN: 1 Feeling unsafe 2 Loitering/transient population 3 Panhandling Untitled map County: Southside/Mandarin Untitled layer 21.0% Duval 14.3% Duval County: Northside 13.6% Duval County: Downtown/Urban Core EMPLOYEES WORKING WITHIN FIVE AND 10 MILES OF DOWNTOWN Source: Placer.ai, January 1 - December 30, 2019 12.8% Clay County/Orange Park 10mi 9.4% Duval County: Arlington/Intracoastal 9.1% Duval County: Westside 6.6% St. Johns County/Ponte Vedra/St. Augustine 5mi 4.4% Baker/Nassau/Putnam/Columbia Counties 3.9% Duval County: Beaches/Mayport 3.7% Florida, Other 1.2% Georgia & South Carolina 53.6% OF EMPLOYEES LIVE <10 MILES FROM DOWNTOWN 96.8% OF EMPLOYEES LIVE <30 MILES FROM DOWNTOWN 16 WITHIN 5 MILES OF DOWNTOWN WITHIN 10 MILES OF DOWNTOWN Population - 196,119 Density - 2,618 (pop/sq. mi.) Trade Area - 78.5 sq. mi. Population - 592,998 Density - 1,836 (pop/sq. mi.) Trade Area - 314 sq. mi. DEMOGRAPHICS OF EMPLOYEES WITHIN FIVE AND 10 MILES OF DOWNTOWN AGE 5mi 22.5% <18 23.5% <18 8.9% 9.7% 18-24 16.6% 25-34 11.9% 35-44 13.5% 45-54 10mi 18-24 16.7% 25-34 12.2% 35-44 13.0% 45-54 12.6% 55-64 12.0% 55-64 13.8% 65+ 12.9% 65+ 16.0% Elementary 13.0% Elementary 32.6% High School Graduate 30.9% High School Graduate EDUCATION 5mi 30.7% College/Associate Degree 13.8% Bachelor Degree 6.9% 10mi 32.9% College/Associate Degree 16.2% Bachelor Degree 7.0% Advanced Degree Advanced Degree TRANSPORTATION TO WORK 5mi 75.4% Drove Alone 79.4% Drove Alone 10.2% Carpooled 10.0% Carpooled 5.0% Public Transit 1.0% Bicycle 2.0% Walked 1.8% 10mi Other 4.4% Worked at home 2.8% Public Transit 0.6% Bicycle 2.0% Walked 1.5% Other 3.7% Worked at home HOUSEHOLD INCOME 5mi 35.6% <$25K 27.0% <$25K 29.7% $25K - $50K 28.8% $25K - $50K 18.5% $50K - $75K 15.3% $50K - $75K 7.8% 10mi 11.4% $75K - $100K 6.8% $100K - $150K 9.1% $100K - $150K 4.8% >$150K 5.2% >$150K $75K - $100K VALUE OF OWNER-OCCUPIED HOUSING 5mi 46.3% <$100K 38.4% <$100K 31.0% $100K - $200K 39.1% $100K - $200K 10.4% $200K - $300K 13.1% $200K - $300K 4.0% $300K - $400K 2.4% $400K - $500K 10mi 4.2% $300K - $400K 1.9% $400K - $500K 4.2% $500K - $1M 2.4% $500K - $1M 1.7% 0.9% >$1M <$1M 17 Manifest Distilling Cypress RETAIL READY BROOKLYN PLACE The Ferber Co., based in Ponte Vedra Beach, is developing an 11,500-squarefoot retail center on 1.5 acres in the Brooklyn District. Featuring a Panera Bread, Chipotle, Bento asian kitchen + sushi and Chop Barber Shop. Brooklyn Place will be located adjacent to Brooklyn Station on Riverside Avenue, a 50,000-square-foot retail center opened in 2015 and anchored by The Fresh Market, a fresh-focused specialty grocer. Investment: $2,829,000 SOUTHBANK CROSSING Jacksonville-based Chase Properties finalized a deal in January 2020 to buy an almost one-acre property in the Southbank District. The developer plans to convert the existing structure, formerly Reddi-Arts, into two buildings at 4,457-square-feet and 6,001-square-feet respectively, with plans for outdoor patio space. Investment: $1,600,000 NEW RETAIL COMING SOON Floral Design  Anejo Cocina Mexicana  Ann Teague’s Lamp Supply  Bagels-R-Us  BENTO asian kitchen + sushi  The Bread & Board Home Street Gallery and Studios  Chop Barber Shop  Joysticks Arcade Lounge and Retro Bar  Lux Hair Salon  Mathers Social Gathering  Panera Bread  Ruby Beach Brewing  Underbelly Oyster Bar & Seafood 18 FAB-REP TARGETED RETAIL ACTIVATION: FOOD & BEVERAGE ESTABLISHMENTS Liberty Market Newnan Ocean Main Laura Ashley Hogan The Downtown Investment Authority’s Targeted Food and Beverage Retail Enhancement Program (FAB-REP) aims to cluster restaurants and bars in two distinct, walkable corridors of Downtown: the Laura/Hogan Street Corridor and The Elbow Entertainment District Corridor in the Central Core. Beginning in 2020, the DIA will incentivize investment through five-year forgivable loans to eligible businesses. The program will fund capital improvements up to 50% of the build-out costs. More than $3 million is earmarked for FAB-REP and incentives will be scaled by type of business. Eligibility requirements for businesses include certain dedicated hours of operation, service type, size and locations with ground-level access and street-level visibility. Church Duval Monroe Adams Forsyth Bay FAB-REP MAP Laura/Hogan Street Corridor The Elbow Entertainment District Corridor Designated Parking Water DOWNTOWN RETAIL ENHANCEMENT GRANT PROGRAM Launched in 2014, the Downtown Retail Enhancement Grant Program was designed to create momentum in the critical task of recruiting and retaining restaurant and retail businesses and creative office space in the Northbank Core Retail Enhancement Area, and in 2019 the program was expanded to incorporate the Southbank Core Retail Enhancement Area. More than $425,000 in program funds have been deployed, leveraging more than $2.8 million of investment and activating more than 23,000 square feet of retail space. (Note: Investment and square footage listed in this report is for completed grants only.) Bellwether STOREFRONT FAÇADE GRANT PROGRAM The new DIA Storefront Façade Grant program will provide grant funding for the improvement of storefronts, and, if applicable, second story façades in the Downtown Jacksonville Historic District—located in the Northbank CRA—to activate the streetscape and the overall revitalization of Downtown Jacksonville. This program is focused on physical improvements to the exterior of buildings, unlike the DIA's Retail Enhancement Grant program, which is focused on the operating business and interior and exterior improvements required for such business operations. Interested parties may receive funding at a maximum amount of $30 per square foot of eligible storefront façade. The grant is capped at 50% of eligible costs, with a maximum grant award of $75,000 per applicant. 19 MAJOR EVENTS  New Year’s Eve Fireworks on the St. Johns River  Martin Luther King Jr. Breakfast  #DTJax Gala  Monster Jam  Gate River Run, largest 15K in the U.S.  Jacksonville Home & Patio Show  World of Nations Celebration  Jacksonville Jazz Festival & Jazz Fest After Dark Jacksonville Jaguars Fans ATTRACTIONS & AMENITIES Downtown Jacksonville boasts the biggest concentration of sports and entertainment venues in Northeast Florida. ROOTING FOR THE HOME TEAMS Fans enjoy a calendar filled year-round with football, baseball, basketball and hockey in the Sports and Entertainment District. TIAA Bank Field is home to the Jacksonville Jaguars (NFL) and cheers of “Duuuval!” The stadium features unique amenities such as heated pools and a dog park, and fans enjoy some of the lowest ticket prices in the league. In March 2019, VyStar Credit Union sponsored the naming rights to the city-owned Veterans Memorial Arena in a 15-year, $9.76 million deal. VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena hosts three teams: the Jacksonville Giants (2019 National Champions of the new American Basketball Association), the Jacksonville IceMen (ECHL), and the Jacksonville Sharks (National Arena League Champions in 2019). In January 2020, 121 Financial Credit Union sponsored the naming rights to the city-owned baseball grounds for 13 years and an undisclosed amount. 121 Financial Ballpark is home to the playful Jacksonville Jumbo Shrimp (MiLB) who are dedicated to providing affordable family fun.  4th of July Fireworks on the St. Johns River  Florida vs. Georgia Football Classic  Southern Women’s Show  TEDxJacksonville  Trick or Treat on the Street  Jacksonville Fair  Jacksonville Light Boat Parade  Small Business Saturday  Veterans Day Parade  Annual Christmas Tree Lighting at Art Walk  #DTJax Awards Breakfast  TaxSlayer Gator Bowl The first Wednesday of each month brings Art Walk to Downtown in the ultimate celebration of Jacksonville’s arts and culture scene, held rain or shine. The Riverside Arts Market is held every Saturday under the Fuller Warren Bridge and features a variety of small businesses, everything from artists and farmers to makers and bakers. VISIT DTJAX.COM FOR EVENTS HAPPENING DOWNTOWN. 20 Firework display on the Main Street Bridge VIBRANT ARTS & CULTURE SCENE Downtown’s theaters and performance venues offer more than 28,000 seats and experiences from national acts to Broadway shows to community theater. Downtown’s historic Florida Theatre is embarking on a $10 million, five-year capital improvement plan with an annual $1 million match from the City of Jacksonville for five years. Improvements will include new sound and digital projection systems, upgrades to the stage lighting system, replacing 1,900 new but historically appropriate seats, lobby space expansion and restoration of the historic marquee. Meanwhile, the Museum of Science and History (MOSH) has launched an $80 million capital campaign called MOSH 2.0: Expanding the Capacity to Inspire Innovation. A public-private partnership, improvements will significantly expand the campus to increase capacity for exhibits, educational programming, research and training opportunities and will re-orient the museum to face the river.  THEATERS & PERFORMANCE HALLS   5 & Dime, A Theatre Co.  Daily’s Place Amphitheater  Florida Theatre  Times-Union Center for the Performing Arts  VyStar Veterans Memorial Arena  Cathedral Arts Project  Florida Ballet  FSCJ Artist Series  Jacksonville Children’s Chorus  Jacksonville Symphony  River City Fine Arts Academy  Theatreworks Inc.  PARKS & TRAILS  Eartha M. M. White Historical Museum  Brooklyn Park  Jacksonville Public Library: Main Branch  The Corkscrew  Cathedral Park  Emerald Trail (Proposed)  Friendship Fountain / St. Johns River Park  MOCA Jacksonville (Museum of Contemporary Art)  Ritz Theatre and Museum PERFORMANCE GROUPS   Merrill House Museum  Friday Musicale  LIBRARY & MUSEUMS  Gefen Riverwalk Park  Museum of Science and History  Hemming Park  Ritz Theatre & Museum  Northbank and Southbank Riverwalks  Metropolitan Park  Treaty Oak Park HISTORIC CHURCHES  Unity Plaza  Veterans Memorial Wall  Basilica of the Immaculate Conception  First Baptist Church of Jacksonville  EXPO CENTERS  First Presbyterian Church  Fairgrounds and Expo Center  First United Methodist Church  Prime Osborn Convention Center  Greater Hill Temple, Faith United Church of the Living God, Inc.  Historic Mt. Zion AME Church  St. Johns Episcopal Cathedral  St. Philip’s Episcopal Church 21 INVESTMENT IN THE PIPELINE $6.5 BILLION IN MAJOR PROJECTS $530M $2.9B Completed 19-20 Projects $3.1B Projects Under Construction Proposed Projects URBAN LAND INSTITUTE TEN PRINCIPLES FOR SUCCESSFUL PUBLIC/PRIVATE PARTNERSHIPS 1 2 3 4 5 Prepare properly for public/private partnerships Create a shared vision Understand your partners and key players Be clear on the risks and rewards for all parties Establish a clear and rational decision-making process 6 Make sure all parties do their homework 7 Secure consistent and coordinated leadership 8 Communicate early and often 9 Negotiate a fair deal structure 10 Build trust as a core value BASIC FINANCING STRUCTURE INVOLVING DEBT AND EQUITY Source: Urban Land Institute DEBT SOURCE Lenders PUBLIC SECTOR AGENCIES Funds Funds Owners and investors CONSTRUCTION & DEBT FINANCING PREDEVELOPMENT & EQUITY FINANCING Debt service Return Entitlements, public participation Taxes & fees THE REAL ESTATE Political/physical/ economic opportunities and constraints Sale, lease, or occupancy $ Vision, skills, pre-development, co-investment Commodity and/or value THE MARKET/ USERS 22 EQUITY SOURCE CAPITAL Return DEVELOPER/ OPERATOR MAJOR DEVELOPMENTS LOT J In the Sports & Entertainment District, a joint venture between Iguana Investments and Cordish Companies has been announced for Lot J. Lot J plans call for a courtyard-style entertainment and retail complex, a residential tower, hotel and office building next to the stadium. The $450 to $500 million Phase I of Lot J is made up of the Live! Arena entertainment venue, a 200-unit boutique hotel and 700 residential units. Phase II is west of Lot J at what is a retention pond at North Georgia Street and Gator Bowl Boulevard and includes a high-rise residential tower and a mixed-use office/ residential tower. Investment: $500 million (Phase 1) THE SHIPYARDS A Notice of Disposition was issued for the Shipyards and Metropolitan Park and Iguana Investments was the top scoring respondent. The conceptual master plan submitted called for more than 600 condos and apartments, 300,000 square feet of office space, 150,000 square feet of retail and commercial space, 300 hotel rooms, and a 250-slip marina on a 70-acre riverfront site. More recent concept plans released by Iguana have included a possible convention center. Phase 1 is to consist of 50-100 multi-family rental and/or for-sale residential units, a 200-250 room, five-star hotel with restaurant, 75,000 square feet of office space, retail and amenities, structured parking and public infrastructure. Investment $500 million (Overall Master Plan) THE DISTRICT The District by Elements of Jacksonville—with its vision for sustainable design—will encourage a healthy lifestyle and diversity. The development is slated to bring 950 residential units, 147 hotel rooms, 200,000 square feet of office space, 134,000 square feet of retail, a 125-slip marina and public park space to the long-vacant, 30-acre JEA site on Downtown’s Southbank. Investment: $535 million FORD ON BAY In February 2020, the DIA approved a bid by New York-based Spandrel Development Partners to build a $136 million mixed-used retail and multifamily development on the former Duval County Courthouse and City Hall properties. Spandrel plans a two-phase project with 520 apartments and up to 74,000 square feet of retail space that could include a grocery store or food hall. As proposed, the activated public waterfront space and streetscapes will make the area a destination for residents and visitors. Investment: $136 million THE JACKSONVILLE LANDING SITE The future of this site starts with the public in mind. Beginning with maintaining the view corridor from Laura Street that was created by clearing the property, the next step will be design of the public space with generous riverfront access in which the new buildings will co-exist. This active, urban design is in response to feedback received from the residents of Jacksonville as well as Downtown business owners and workers. The mixed-use development that follows will be the result of a wide search for the best in design and function to meet the needs of the community and create an iconic space that we all can be proud of and enjoy. Investment: To Be Determined 23 public art throughout its parking garage and plans to create pop-up experiences in its alleyway. Vystar was also the successful bidder to acquire a City parcel located at the corner of Forsyth and Main, on which the company plans to build a parking garage with associated retail. Investment: $100+ million JONES BROTHERS FURNITURE BUILDING THE BARNETT & LAURA ST. TRIO In the Central Core, SouthEast Group completed the renovation of the historic, 18-story Barnett Building. The mixed-use building now houses 100 working-class-to-market rate apartments, the University of North Florida’s Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation​and The Jacksonville Business Journal, with a Chase Bank announced. Next, renovation will begin on the Laura Street Trio buildings adding a boutique hotel, high-end “Sophisticated Southern” restaurant and a rooftop bar. Investment: $100 million AMBASSADOR HOTEL Augustine Development Group purchased five lots totaling 1.5 acres for $5.4 million in July 2018. The group has begun work to convert the long-vacant, historic Ambassador Hotel into a 120-room hotel property with a nationally recognized flag at an estimated construction cost of $18 million. The phases following include plans for a 200-unit apartment building and parking garage to further benefit the needs of the Independent Life Insurance Building renovation, also underway on the same street. Investment: $37.1 million INDEPENDENT LIFE INSURANCE BUILDING Augustine Development Group purchased the building—now designated a local Historic Landmark—in October 2019 for $3.7 million, with plans to invest more than $30 million in the redevelopment of the property. The developer announced plans to renovate the 18-story, 165,000 square foot building at 233 W. Duval St. to include a 21,000-square-foot grocery store, 140 market-rate apartments and a 10,000 square foot rooftop restaurant, lounge and pool. The Developer proposes to construct a structured parking facility to serve the needs of this property as well as the redevelopment of the Ambassador Hotel and apartments along the same street. The development is projected to create 100 jobs over 14 months. Investment: $31.7 million VYSTAR CREDIT UNION HEADQUARTERS Jacksonville’s largest credit union relocated its headquarters and 1,200 employees Downtown in 2019. VyStar Credit Union purchased the 23-story high-rise at 76 S. Laura Street and adjacent garage for $59 million in July 2018 and purchased the neighboring seven-story 100 W. Bay Building for $5 million in February 2019. The credit union is infusing more than $15 million in renovations into 100 W. Bay, with retailers Bread & Board Provisions and Peterbrooke Chocolatier located on the first floor. In addition, the credit union worked with Art Republic to install 24 Developer Ace Jax LLC has announced plans for the redevelopment of two long-vacant, historic properties. Plans for the Jones Brothers building include 28 apartments, more than 1,100 square feet of retail space and nearly 1,000 square feet of office space. Next door, the old Western Union building is slated for 9,600 square feet of retail space. Investment: $13.3 million THE DORO Georgia-based Rise Properties LLC plans to develop an eightstory, mixed-use development that will add 247 apartments to the Sports and Entertainment District. The project will include a rooftop pool, approximately 7,000 square feet of combined first floor and rooftop retail, and a seven-story parking deck. A feature wall will incorporate materials and architectural features that were found on the original Doro building. The former Forsyth Street right-of-way adjacent to the site is expected to create a destination for outdoor social activities including markets, culture and entertainment all year around. Investment: To Be Determined LAVILLA NEIGHBORHOOD DEVELOPMENT STRATEGY As Jacksonville’s oldest suburb, LaVilla was once known as the Harlem of the South and the epicenter of black culture and commerce in Northeast Florida. To redevelop LaVilla while respecting its rich history and celebrating its cultural impact, the DIA and Jacksonville Transportation Authority completed a LaVilla Neighborhood Development Strategy in Spring 2019. The plan calls for workforce, senior and market-rate apartments, mid-market, for-sale townhomes, a LaVilla Heritage Trail for pedestrians and bicycles, and a Water Street road diet to connect the historic district to the riverfront. The development of the Lift Ev’ry Voice and Sing park will recognize the important contribution by brothers James Weldon Johnson and J. Rosamond Johnson in the creation of the country’s “Black National Anthem.” FIRST BAPTIST PARCELS First Baptist Church is selling 11.29 acres, approximately nine blocks, bounded by Jacksonville City Hall, Florida State College at Jacksonville and Main Street, in an effort to consolidate and downsize its Downtown campus. In spring 2020, investors Jim and Ellen Wiss purchased the first block with plans to develop up to 200 market-rate apartments with associated first floor commercial space at an anticipated cost of $40 million. OTHER NOTABLE DEVELOPMENTS  RESIDENTIAL COMPLETED • Broadstone River House........................ $38M • Lofts at Jefferson Station....................... $17M • SoBa Apartments.................................... $15M UNDER CONSTRUCTION • Cathedral Residences renovations....... $30M • Elena Flats............................................... $2.8M • Lofts at Brooklyn..................................... $30M • Shipping Container Apartments.......... $1.2M • Southbank Urban Residences............... $37M PROPOSED • Ashley Square Senior Housing.............. $15M • JTA Southbank Residential........Not Available • LaVilla Townhomes................................ $3.6M • Lofts at Cathedral................................... $20M  OFFICE COMPLETED • Baptist Health Improvements.............. $1.6M • Black Knight Financial improvements........................................ $1.6M • Brewster Hospital renovation by North Florida Land Trust.................................. $540K • Eight Forty One Tower purchase & improvements..................................$68.1M • Prudential Tower improvements......... $1.7M • Riverplace Tower improvements......... $2.6M UNDER CONSTRUCTION • Bank of America Tower improvements........................................ $1.6M • BB&T Tower improvements................. $3.8M • Community First Credit Union Headquarters purchase and improvements........................................ $6.4M • CSX improvements................................ $4.1M • FIS Headquarters..................................$145M • JEA Headquarters, garage & retail space.....................................................$72.2M • Wells Fargo Tower improvements.......... $2M  RETAIL COMPLETED • Burlock and Barrel Distillery................. $1.3M • Ruth’s Chris Steak House...................... $663K UNDER CONSTRUCTION • Brooklyn Place with Bento Asian Kitchen + Sushi, Chipotle Mexican Grill, Chop Barber Shop and Panera...................... $2.8M • Chase Bank............................................. $1.5M PROPOSED • Daily’s Gas Station & Convenience Store............................................Not Available • Southbank Crossing.............................. $1.6M  HOTEL UNDER CONSTRUCTION • Residence Inn by Marriott Hotel........$17.6M PROPOSED • Hyatt Place..................................Not Available  MIXED USE UNDER CONSTRUCTION • 225 Laura Street Apartments and restaurant............................................... $900K • Baptist Hospital improvements & Firehouse Subs Buildout.......................................$18.7M • Old Federal Reserve Bank purchase... $714K • Vista Brooklyn apartments and retail.. $60M PROPOSED • First Baptist Block Development by Homkor of Florida.................................. $40M • Le Mesa Building apartments & retail.... $3M  EDS, MEDS, CIVIC & ENTERTAINMENT COMPLETED • Faben Women’s Clinic........................... $1.2M • UNF Center for Entrepreneurship and Innovation............................................... $1.6M UNDER CONSTRUCTION • DCI Jacksonville Dialysis Clinic.............. $3.8M • Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office Police Memorial Building & Pretrial Detention Facility improvements......................................$61.9M • Prime Osborn Convention Center improvements......................................$16.9M • Ritz Theatre & Museum improvements........................................ $3.5M • TIAA Bank Field improvements & Practice Field Cool Zone...................................... $3.8M • Wolfson Children’s Critical Care Tower.....................................................$187M PROPOSED • Florida Theatre improvements............. $10M • MOSH 2.0 improvements...................... $80M  INFRASTRUCTURE & TRANSPORTATION COMPLETED • Acosta Bridge LED Lighting................... $2.6M • JRTC Administration & Bus Transfer Facility - Phase II...................................$49.3M • JTRC Autonomous Avenue..................$11.5M • Kings Avenue/Prudential Drive resurfacing.............................................. $3.8M • Riverplace Boulevard road diet............ $6.8M UNDER CONSTRUCTION • Coastline Drive........................................ $33M • Children’s Way/Nira Street pedestrian improvements........................................ $1.3M • First Coast Flyer, Southwest Corridor.................................................$33.2M • Florida Blue Parking Garage...............$22.5M • Hart Bridge Ramp Demolition............... $37M • I-10/I-95 Interchange improvements & Fuller Warren Bridge: bike/pedestrian path........................................................$128M • I-95 Overland Bridge project...............$227M • JTRC W. Forsyth roadway improvements........................................ $2.5M • Palm Avenue improvements................ $4.9M • Water Street Parking Garage improvements........................................ $3.1M PROPOSED • Bay Street Innovation Corridor...........$350M • Brooklyn Area drainage & improvements.................................... $2.5M • Brooklyn Road Diet................................ $2.2M • Brooklyn Skyway Station....................... $800K • Hogan St. Cycle Track............................ $2.9M • Main St. Bridge Ramp Removal......................................Not Available • Two-way street conversion...................... $5M • Water Street road diet..............Not Available  PARKS & TRAILS UNDER CONSTRUCTION • Downtown landscaping, lighting enhancements & pocket parks............ $974K • Emerald Trail & Model Mile................... $31M • Hogan’s Creek Greenway improvements......................................... $15M • McCoy’s Creek Greenway restoration and remediation, pedestrian bridge & kayak launches................................................$30.5M • Northbank Riverwalk bulkhead repairs, wayfinding signage & "Jacksonville's Musical Heritage" activation node...................$43.3M • Southbank Riverwalk extension & enhancements.....................................$10.5M • St. Johns River Park and Friendship Fountain restoration & "Exploring the St. Johns River activity node.......................... $8M PROPOSED • Floating Docks & Finger Piers............... $3.7M • Lift Ev’ry Voice and Sing Park....Not Available 25   Union Main Laura Hogan Julia Pearl RITZ THEATRE & MUSEUM Clay Broad State Jefferson Lee Davis DOWNTOWN INVESTMENT MAP 2019-2020 FIRST BAPTIST PARCELS CATHEDRAL RESIDENCES Beaver Ashley   Duval TA TE 95 Monroe RS Adams COMMUNITY FIRST HQ  TE AMBASSADOR HOTEL  EMERALD TRAIL MODEL MILE INDEPENDENT LIFE  BREWSTER HOSPITAL HOGAN ST.  RENOVATION CYCLE TRACK IN ks on BROOKLYN SKYWAY STATION  e  RESIDENCE INN ROAD DIET CSX      VISTA BROOKLYN WELLS FARGO JACKSONVILL LANDING SITE MA  RA NORTHBANK RIVERWALK REPAIRS & "JACKSONVILLE'S MUSICAL HERITAGE" ACTIVATION NODE  RUTH’S CHRIS IM RIV T    BROOKLYN AREA DRAINAGE  BURLOCK & BARREL  place  River PRUDENTIA SOUTHBANK URBAN TOWER RESIDENCES FIS HQ EIGHT FORTY ONE  Mary BAPTIST HOSPITAL PALM AVE.   MO   Riverside Magnolia BOA TOWER ACOSTA BRIDGE LED LIGHTING DCI DIALYSIS CLINIC Oak Park Chelsea VYSTAR WATER ST. PARKING HQ GARAGE HYATT PLACE  WATER ST.    LAURA ST. TRI "EXPLORING THE ST. JOHN'S RIVER" ACTIVITY NODE & FRIENDSHIP FOUNTAIN RESTORATION WOLFSON CHILDREN’S CRITICAL CARE TOWER BLACK KNIGHT FINANCIAL  26     BROOKLYN Forest  ROAD DIET FLORIDA BLUE PARKING GARAGE  Edison Spruce BROOKLYN PLACE FIRST COAST FLYER, SOUTHWEST CORRIDOR  Pr ic   LOFTS AT  BROOKLYN Do ra Roselle  BB&T TOWER 225 LAURA ST. APTS.   I-10/I-95 IMP. & FULLER WARREN BRIDGE BIKE/PED PATH  Palm Ja c St MCCOY’S CREEK on ew GREENWAY all  THE BARNETT, UNF & CHASE BANK LIFT EV’RY VOICE AND SING PARK LAVILLA Houston  LE MESA TOWNHOMES  Forsyth DAILY’S GAS JRTC - PHASE II & STATION  AUTONOMOUS AVE. Bay LOFTS AT PRIME OSBORN CONVENTION CENTER  JEFFERSON STATION  Water/Independent  JEA HQ    arco San M Church JONES BROS. OLD FEDERAL RESERVE BANK CHILDR /NIR  TWO-WAY STREET CONVERSION THE DORO FLORIDA  THEATRE  JACKSONVILLE SHERIFF'S OFFICE  BAY ST. INNOVATION CORRIDOR  FORD RIVERPLACE BLVD. ROAD DIET BAPTIST   HEALTH IMP.  Kipp SOBA APTS. 5 9 TATE RS INTE   JTA SOUTHBANK RESIDENTIAL SOUTHBANK CROSSING   ks KINGS AVE./PRUDENTIAL DR. RESURFACING  I-95 OVERLAND BRIDGE PROJECT ast FABEN WOMEN’S CLINIC BROADSTONE RIVER HOUSE Broa dc OSH 2.0 Main SOUTHBANK RIVERWALK EXTENSION & ENHANCEMENTS  Kings  THE SHIPYARDS  LOT J HART BRIDGE RAMP DEMO. COASTLINE DR.    HOGAN’S CREEK GREENWAY   VERPLACE TOWER TIAA BANK FIELD & PRACTICE FIELD COOL ZONE    ON BAY  Franklin ELENA FLATS LOFTS AT CATHEDRAL Georgia  SHIPPING CONTAINER APTS. AP Randolph  LE E AIN ST. BRIDGE AMP REMOVAL AL Washington  IO S MP. Liberty ASHLEY SQUARE Palmetto  Catherine  ric Hend S Market Ocean Newnan Southbank aerial THE DISTRICT KEY  RESIDENTIAL  OFFICE  RETAIL  HOTEL  MIXED USE  EDS, MEDS, CIVIC & ENTERTAINMENT  INFRASTRUCTURE & TRANSPORTATION  PARKS & TRAILS REN’S WAY RA ST. 27 DOWNTOWN INVESTMENT AUTHORITY The Downtown Investment Authority (DIA) is the Community Redevelopment Agency and the Economic Development arm of the City within Downtown. In fiscal year 2019-2020, the DIA has invested approximately $21 million to leverage more than $166 million in private capital investment and new construction. Since 2014, the DIA has invested more than $56 million into Downtown to leverage more than $466 million in private capital investment and construction. To support private investors, the DIA offers numerous incentives, such as the Multi-Family REV Grant, a real estate tax recovery grant. To enhance the Downtown environment, the DIA invests in infrastructure improvements such as public art, free Wi-Fi, urban park space, public parking and street lighting. To shape the future of Downtown, the DIA has commissioned studies on pedestrian walkability, riverfront design standards, convention center feasibility, parking and development strategies for publicly controlled assets. And, since 2016, to support investor-driven parking demand, the DIA has overseen the Office of Public Parking. INCENTIVES To support developers and others looking to invest in Downtown, the DIA provides numerous incentives to encourage such investment. In addition to administering development and redevelopment agreements, allocating development rights, creating public/private partnerships, and providing enhanced public amenities, the DIA provides many program-specific incentives, such as:  Commercial Incentives  Residential Incentives  Downtown Preservation and Revitalization Program  Stormwater Credits Some development incentives are available Downtown without regard to job creation or specific property use. The following incentives are available for any Downtown development/redevelopment:  No State Income Tax  Simplified zoning  No parking requirements DIA.COJ.NET  Storm water quality credits available for purchase COMMUNITY REDEVELOPMENT AREA GOALS  Allocation of development rights free of mobility fees 1 Reinforce Downtown as the City’s unique epicenter for business, history, culture, education and entertainment  Qualification of federal Historic Tax Credits within the National Historic District or for locally designated landmark 2 Increase rental and owner-occupied housing Downtown, targeting key demographic groups seeking a more urban lifestyle 3 Simplify the approval process for Downtown development and improve departmental and agency coordination 4 Improve walkability/bikeability and connectivity to adjacent neighborhoods and the St. Johns River while creating highly walkable nodes 5 Establish a waterfront design framework to ensure a unique experience and sense of place 6 Maintain a clean and safe 24-7 Downtown for residents, workers, and visitors 7 Promote design for healthy living by using planning and economic development policies The Barnett 28 SIMPLIFY ZONING FOR DEVELOPMENT In Spring 2019, the 2030 Comprehensive Plan was modified to eliminate Downtown’s minimum parking requirements and the Downtown Zoning Overlay was updated to streamline 14 zoning categories into one Commercial Central Business District (CCBD) zone. The new CCBD zone will permit myriad uses: residential, office, retail and entertainment, mixed-use properties, “eds and meds,” utilities and parking garages. Prior restrictions on riverfront height and setbacks were clarified and illustrated with built-in permitted alternatives. Northbank Riverwalk at Gefen Park UPDATED MARKET FEASIBILITY ANALYSIS The Downtown Investment Authority (DIA) issued an RFP for an updated Market Feasibility Analysis for Downtown in late 2019. Willdan was the top scoring respondent. The update will form the basis for the incentive program changes in the updated Business Investment and Development Plan to be developed over the coming year. UPDATING THE BUSINESS INVESTMENT AND DEVELOPMENT PLAN FOR DOWNTOWN The Downtown Investment Authority (DIA) is seeking proposals from qualified firms to update the current Business Investment and Development Plan for Downtown, which includes the CRA Plans. This update will focus on four major elements, as well as update project lists and performance metrics. The scope includes: 1 Revision of existing incentive programs and creation of new incentive programs to better meet current market conditions and further the mission of the DIA 2 Creation of a master park plan for Downtown 3 Creation of a branding plan for each of the Downtown Districts identified in the zoning overlay 4 Update of Downtown Design guidelines to refine and conform to the recently adopted zoning overlay In addition, the deliverable will include a condensed, highly illustrative version of the Plan that can be distributed to the public and the development community. This “Downtown Master Plan” will graphically illustrate the vision for Downtown and the goals and projects in the Business Investment and Development Plan. 29 Jacksonville Regional Transportation Center TRANSPORTATION & INFRASTRUCTURE While the region is traditionally a sprawling, car-centric community, Downtown Jacksonville is in the midst of a renaissance into a major multi-modal transportation hub. A $50 million regional transportation center opened in Spring 2020 and a $350 million innovation corridor is in the works. Outdated bridge ramps are coming down while road diets and one-way to two-way street conversions are in the works. The Downtown Investment Authority has completed a parking study and is implementing parking improvements. And, bikeped loops, riverwalk enhancements and greenways are being constructed to allow the community to take better advantage of Downtown’s waterways and amenities. JACKSONVILLE REGIONAL TRANSPORTATION CENTER (JRTC) Twenty-five years and $57.3 million in the making, the JRTC opened in spring 2020. The second phase of the new multimodal station for all public transit in the region, integrates a 40,000-square-foot JTA bus transfer facility, the First Coast Flyer Bus Rapid Transit (BRT), Skyway/U2C, rideshare and bike share – all in one transit hub. Phase one, 30 a 10,000-square foot Intercity Bus Terminal, featuring Greyhound and MegaBus, opened in the spring of 2018 and is now connected via pedestrian walkway to the main station. THE ULTIMATE URBAN CIRCULATOR AND BAY STREET INNOVATION CORRIDOR Together, the City of Jacksonville and Jacksonville Transportation Authority are collaborating with numerous other organizations, including North Florida Transportation Planning Organization, JEA and JAX Chamber on a Bay Street Innovation Corridor. This smart transportation corridor will connect the Jacksonville Regional Transportation Center to the Sports and Entertainment District creating a national model for the deployment of autonomous vehicles. This will include converting the existing Skyway and installing smart corridor technologies such as dynamic signals, connected intersections, integrated data exchange, pedestrian sensors, flood warning sensors and power consumption reduction. In early 2019, the U.S. Department of Transportation awarded a $25 million BUILD Grant to both the JTA and the City of Jacksonville – half of the grant went to JTA for the U2C and DOWNTOWN IS THE MOST WALKABLE NEIGHBORHOOD IN JACKSONVILLE. - WALKSCORE half went to the City for the Hart Bridge modifications. And in Spring 2020, JTA announced the addition of a Brooklyn Skyway Station to begin the expansion of the footprint into surrounding areas. U2C.JTAFLA.COM FIRST COAST FLYER BUS RAPID TRANSIT Launched in 2015, the $151.8-million First Coast Flyer BRT connects Jacksonville’s Northside, Southside and Beaches. In Spring 2019, JTA received a $16.6-million Capital Investment Grant from the Federal Transit Administration for the final 12.9- mile line which will connect Downtown to Orange Park. The full system will be completed by the end of 2020, creating a 57-mile network connecting the region to the JRTC and Downtown. 60 FCF.JTAFLA.COM TRANSIT SCORE 57-MILE NETWORK OF BUS RAPID TRANSIT 74 WALK SCORE 2.8 MILES OF RIVERWALK PROMENADE 57 BIKE SCORE ROADS FOR PEOPLE, NOT JUST CARS Downtown is beginning the process to convert one-way streets back to two-way streets to calm traffic and boost walkability in the core. Eastwest running Forsyth and Adams streets will be first to be converted connecting LaVilla, the Central Core and the Sports & Entertainment District. The recently completed Riverplace Boulevard Road Diet has reconfigured a main artery through the Southbank’s office and residential towers for multi-modal use. In Brooklyn, a road diet along Park Street will compliment growing residential and retail needs. And, proposed as part of the LaVilla Neighborhood Development Strategy, a Water Street road diet will add a cycletrack and enhance connectivity to the St. Johns River. In the Sports & Entertainment District, a large portion of the elevated Hart Bridge ramp connector is currently being removed to bring the expressway down to street level to open up parcels on and near the St. Johns for redevelopment. The demolition is expected to be completed by the end of 2021. In addition, the Main Street bridge ramp, which provides convoluted access for cars and pedestrians alike will begin to come down in 2020 to better connect to the street grid. 30-MILE EMERALD TRAIL MASTER PLAN Southbank Riverwalk Northbank Riverwalk 31 MAKING PARKING EASIER Adequate and convenient parking contributes to the health of downtowns. Downtown boasts more than 44,000 parking spaces, and while the demand is catching up to this supply, a large amount of land is still devoted to parking. Peripheral parking areas are underutilized while central areas experience high occupancy. Such a supply can be a boon to commuters, but nevertheless it negatively impacts the activity level along Downtown’s streets. The DIA is leading the way on a comprehensive Downtown parking strategy consistent with the Business Investment and Development Strategy. In 2019, the DIA and the Office of Public Parking released a Downtown Parking Study by Tim Haas that analyzed on- and off-street parking conditions to maximize the efficiency of the current parking system and recommended improvements to the overall management and operation of the parking system. In addition:  The DIA has revised parking standards to eliminate minimum requirements throughout Downtown and to clarify the requirements for street-front retail or Urban Open Space wrapping the ground floor. Both the Florida Blue and FIS private garages approved this year will now provide nighttime and weekend parking for the public and additional public parking was added on Magnolia Street.  An on-street parking app will soon be available and kiosk pilot programs are in the works.  Rates for city-owned garages and on-street parking will be adjusted over the coming year to better manage supply and demand insuring the availability of on-street parking for short-term needs.  Plans include implementation of a shuttle service to more remote, less expensive lots, but in the meantime, the free Skyway has accommodated demand for circulation within Downtown. PEDESTRIAN & BICYCLE ENHANCEMENTS The City completed a new Pedestrian and Bicycle Master Plan in 2017 to prioritize pedestrian access, bicyclists and public transportation. The Florida Department of Transportation is currently constructing a $128 million shared-use bicycle and pedestrian lane on the Fuller Warren Bridge to link Brooklyn to the Southbank/San Marco neighborhoods. Planned riverwalk expansions and roadway improvements will create a Southbank loop for walkers, runners and cyclists. In the Central Core, a lane of Hogan Street is planned for the installation of a cycle track that will connect the Northbank Riverwalk to the Springfield neighborhood to the north. EMERALD TRAIL MASTER PLAN In Spring 2019, Jacksonville City Council approved Groundwork Jacksonville’s Emerald Trail Master Plan to create a 30-mile network of bicycle and pedestrian trails that will connect Downtown to 14 historic neighborhoods, 18 schools, two colleges and nearly 30 parks. Phase one is a 1.3-mile “Model Project” to connect the existing S-Line Rail Trail in Springfield to the Prime Osborn Convention Center in LaVilla. The Emerald Trail is estimated to cost $31 million, plus land acquisition, and take 10 years to complete. GROUNDWORKJACKSONVILLE.ORG/EMERALD-TRAIL 32 IMPROVED MULTIMODAL INFRASTRUCTURE BAY ST. INNOVATION CORRIDOR SKYWAY SKYWAY STATIONS POTENTIAL SKYWAY EXPANSION POTENTIAL SKYWAY STATIONS FIRST COAST FLYER BRT PLANNED FLYER BRT BIKE FACILITY PLANNED HOGAN ST. CYCLE TRACK EMERALD TRAIL MODEL MILE RIVERWALK PLANNED MULTIUSE PATH EXISTING DOCKS PROPOSED DOCKS JRTC RECLAIMING WATERWAYS FOR THE COMMUNITY Community leaders have recently identified a number of riverfront “nodes” as ideal locations to celebrate different facets of Jacksonville’s identity. The first two node redevelopments are funded and in various stages of design. Plans for the Southbank’s iconic St. Johns River Park and Friendship Fountain call for a botanical garden, history-themed play park, concessions and fountain upgrades. This "Exploring the St. Johns River" node will tell the story of the indigenous Timucuan people, Ribault’s landing in 1562, the Ft. Caroline settlement, and botanist and horticulturist John Bartram’s travels through Jacksonville. Plans for the riverfront node "Jacksonville’s Musical Heritage" at the Times-Union Center for the Performing Arts call for a musical heritage garden and a new Wallcast Outdoor Venue with livestream performances and movie projections. JTA has re-illuminated the Acosta Bridge, years after the original lighting failed, with new color-changing LED lights outlining its profile. These enhancements combined with the electric blue Main Street Bridge will create one large nightly multimedia show Downtown. Meanwhile, remediation and restoration is planned for two major creeks that branch off from the St. Johns River throughout Downtown to open these waterways up as amenities for the community. Improvements to the Hogan’s Creek Greenway trail will increase connectivity to the Northbank Riverwalk and out to neighboring trails and communities. The McCoy’s Creek Greenway will receive a new pedestrian bridge, kayak launch sites and bulkhead restoration. 33 Hyatt Regency Jacksonville Riverfront THE CENTER OF TOURISM Central for conventions, business trips, medical and eco tourism, Downtown offers more than 2,300 hotel rooms and 520,000 square feet of air-conditioned meeting space. Upscale hotel accommodations offer a range of on-site amenities and are within walking distance of sports areas, concert venues, dining, entertainment and Downtown’s scenic riverwalks. With easy access to the Interstate, Downtown is a short drive to regional tourism highlights including the Beaches and historic St. Augustine. In 2020, Delta Hotels by Marriott took over the Lexington Hotel brand along the Southbank Riverwalk adding a fullservice convention hotel to their brand in Downtown. With available property on and near the St. Johns River, Downtown is primed for hotel development. Hotels are currently planned to breathe new life into some of Downtown’s historic buildings as well as planned for multiple mixed use developments, including The Shipyards and The District on the riverfront. TOURISM METRICS Source: Visit Jacksonville 2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 477,507 496,748 528,768 526,394 551,501 526,538 569,496 543,774 619,700 611,010 55.0% 57.4% 61.1% 60.8% 63.7% 61.1% 65.9% 63.1% 71.8% 70.9% Average Daily Rate $85.00 $87.00 $98.00 $102.85 $106.50 $113.53 $124.35 $124.36 $127.14 $126.07 RevPAR $55.60 $56.85 $59.77 $62.49 $67.86 $69.37 $81.93 $78.44 $91.32 $89.34 Total Hotel Room Nights Hotel Occupancy Rate HOTEL SUMMARY Hotel Rooms Hyatt Regency Jacksonville Riverfront 951 110,000 SF Omni Jacksonville Hotel 354 14,000 SF DoubleTree Jacksonville Riverfront 293 12,000 SF Extended Stay America Jacksonville Riverwalk 101 N/A Hampton Inn Jacksonville Downtown I-95 118 N/A Hilton Garden Inn Jacksonville Downtown Southbank 123 N/A 98 N/A 355 35,000 SF Homewood Suites Jacksonville Downtown Southbank The Southbank Hotel at Jacksonville Riverwalk 34 Meeting Space 263 HOTEL ROOMS UNDER CONSTRUCTION Hotel Rooms Residence Inn by Marriott Hotel 136 Ambassador Hotel 127 673+ HOTEL ROOMS PROPOSED Hotel Rooms Courtyard by Marriott, Laura Street Trio 145 AC Hotel by Marriott / The District 200 Not Announced / Lot J 200 Hyatt Place @ Sister Cities 128 Cathedral District Mural ART ON DISPLAY Downtown has seen an explosion of public art in recent years, with the addition of nearly 100 pieces, including murals, sculptures, mosaics, seating, bike rack installations and traffic signal cabinet art in the past decade alone. The Cultural Council of Greater Jacksonville’s Art in Public Places program oversees the selection, installation and conservation of a wide range of art on City-owned property and administers the Downtown Investment Authority’s Urban Arts Project, infusing art into targeted areas. The privately funded Art Republic has curated murals on private property since 2016, while Friends of Hemming Park added its own Sculpture Garden in 2019. New public art projects include:  The Cultural Council of Greater Jacksonville unveiled “Jaxoscope,” an interactive and illuminated installation by Buffalo-based Shasti O’Leary-Soudant in early 2020 in Jesse B. Smith Park across from the The Florida Theatre.  Carlos Alves and JC Carroll installed a mosaic on the Yates Fountain in a collaboration between the City’s Public Works Department and Art in Public Places Program.  “Emergence,” a new LED light installation with murals is being installed on the Water Street Garage at the base of the Acosta Bridge. The murals will depict the musical scores of the historic “Lift Ev’ry Voice and Sing” and contemporary “Bridges,” recently composed for the Jacksonville Symphony. It's the work of Seattle-based artists Laura Haddad and Tom Drugan.  The Duval County Courthouse Plaza Stakeholder Committee is engaged to secure iconic public art with the largest Art in Public Places budget to date earmarked from the courthouse construction cost designated by a city ordinance. TOURS & OUTDOORS ACTIVITIES Myriad tour options allow visitors to explore Downtown on land or by river. Visitors can explore architecture and art on electric fat-tire bikes or power a Pedal Pub to visit Downtown’s favorite watering holes. Go Tuk’n’s tuk tuks take visitors on Downtown tours, kids scavenger hunts, and Urban Core Brewery & More Tours. Out on the water, enthusiasts can enjoy Urban Kayaking Adventures, the Kraken Cycleboat (a boat-bike combination experience), or themed cruises on the St. Johns River Taxi. Visit Jacksonville offers self-guided walking tours of Downtown's Public Art and Historic Architecture. On foot, nearly three miles of riverwalk on both banks and a bridge loop through St. Johns River Park, where Friendship Fountain makes a stunning setting for relaxation and exercise alike. Under the Acosta Bridge on the Northbank, Corkscrew Park provides the community with a shaded, outdoor public gym. 35 Jaxoscope at The Florida Theatre Pedal Pub at Hemming Park BUSINESS IMPROVEMENT DISTRICT SUPPORTING A VIBRANT DOWNTOWN JACKSONVILLE Formed in 2000, Downtown Vision is the Business Improvement District (BID) for Downtown Jacksonville, a not-for-profit organization funded mainly by Downtown’s commercial property owners through a self-assessment. Downtown Vision is governed by a 27-person board of directors representing diverse Downtown stakeholders. Downtown Vision has a corporate structure with both a 501(c)6 nonprofit business association and a 501(c)3 charitable corporation, providing members and supporters with a wide range of support and benefits. Downtown Ambassador escort A strong public-private partnership, Downtown Vision is tightly aligned to the mission and priorities of the City of Jacksonville and the Downtown Investment Authority (DIA). This collaboration integrates the private sector in the execution of the DIA’s Community Redevelopment Area (CRA) plans and benefits property owners, residents, businesses and their employees. MISSION: Create and support a vibrant Downtown and promote Downtown as an exciting place to live, work, visit and invest. A PUBLIC-PRIVATE PARTNERSHIP FOR DOWNTOWN   THE CITY OF JACKSONVILLE DIA BOARD OF DIRECTORS Mayoral & City Council Appointees  DOWNTOWN INVESTMENT AUTHORITY (DIA) DOWNTOWN VISION, INC. (DVI)   DVI BOARD OF DIRECTORS DOWNTOWN PROPERTY OWNERS Diverse Downtown Stakeholders Tenants & Owners DTJAX.COM Lights on Laura 36 First Wednesday Art Walk DTJAX.COM KEY BID SERVICES DISTRICT SERVICES EXPERIENCE CREATION MARKETING & EVENTS INFORMATION MANAGEMENT Ambassadors & Stakeholder Support Placemaking & Public Realm Marketing, PR, Events & Promotions Research, Reports & Surveys   The cornerstone of a great Downtown is a clean and safe environment, which is why we focus on it seven days a week. We also partner with the City, Sheriff’s Office, property owners and others to support economic growth and the live/work/visit experience. Public space beautification, activation and management plays a fundamental role in creating exceptional experiences. We focus on improving the public realm experience to create reasons for people to linger, explore and return Downtown.  We market Downtown as the unique epicenter for business, history, culture, education and entertainment for our region. Our events showcase all DTJax offers, serve as economic drivers for businesses and create comfortable settings for people to explore Downtown. The Patio on Hogan  As the primary source for information on Downtown, we collect data and analyze trends including: investment, office market and residential growth. By benchmarking and issuing reports, we tell the story of Downtown’s revitalization. The Corkscrew public gym 37 Rooftop dining at Cowford Chophouse BOARD & STAFF DOWNTOWN INVESTMENT AUTHORITY BOARD DOWNTOWN VISION BOARD Councilmember Joyce Morgan Jacksonville City Council Numa Saisselin, Chair Florida Theatre William (Bill) R. Prescott Heritage Capital Group Ron Moody, Chair Traci Jenks, Vice Chair Cushman & Wakefield of Florida John Ream The Connect Agency W. Braxton Gillam, Esq., Vice Chair Oliver Barakat, Treasurer CBRE Group, Inc. Carol Worsham, Secretary Kerri Stewart, Secretary JEA Alex Sifakis JWB Real Estate Alex Travis Rogers Towers Cyndy Trimmer Attorney, Driver, McAfee, Hawthorne & Diebenow, PLLC Craig Gibbs, Esq., Immediate Past Chair William E. Adams, Esq. Oliver Barakat James “Jim” Citrano, Jr. Todd Froats David Ward, Esq. DOWNTOWN INVESTMENT AUTHORITY STAFF Lori Boyer Chief Executive Officer John R. Crescimbeni Contract & Regulatory Compliance Manager Karen Underwood-Eiland Executive Assistant Steven T. Kelley, DBA Director of Downtown Real Estate & Development Guy Parola Operations Manager Lori Radcliffe-Meyers Redevelopment Coordinator Ina Mezini Marketing and Communications Specialist Jackie Mott Financial Analyst 38 Teresa Durand-Stuebben, Immediate Past Chair Foresight Construction Group Zach Ashourian Ash Properties Lori Boyer Downtown Investment Authority Caryn Carreiro Cushman & Wakefield of Florida Stephen Crosby InvestJax Paul Davison BDO USA, LLP Nathaniel P. Ford Sr. Jacksonville Transportation Authority Paul Grainger Iconic Real Estate Jan Hanak Regency Centers Elias Hionides PETRA COTY HOSKINS First Baptist Church Allan Iosue Haskell Asst. Chief Jimmy Judge Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office Vince Mccormack Perdue, Inc. Ryan McIntyre VyStar Credit Union Chief Donald Tuten Jacksonville Sheriff’s Office Aundra Wallace JAXUSA Partnership FORMER DIRECTORS Lexi Brantman Communications Manager Reggie Agulto Marketing & Events Assistant AMBASSADORS Bill Wimmer Program Manager Cynthia Ray Social Services Outreach Specialist Lionel Roberts Team Lead Troy Harris Supervisor Richard Isacs Property Maintenance Specialist Mike Ryan Special Projects & Business Outreach Specialist William E. Adams, Esq. Gunster Law Firm Whitney Hilliard Outreach Assistant John Blount First Baptist Church Mike Carpenter Councilmember Ju’coby Pittman Jacksonville City Council Rebecca Grimaldo DOWNTOWN VISION STAFF Jacob A. Gordon, Esq. Chief Executive Officer Cheryl Hunte Business Administrator Katherine Hardwick Vice President of Marketing Eric Miller, Esq. Vice President of District Services Eduardo Santos Director of Experience Haley Tinkle Events Manager Johnny Duckett Thomas Hannah Russell Hill Kenneth Holmes Antoino Lewis O'Dell McMillan Laneasha Silcott Jaquez Williams David Vazquez CREDITS The data presented in this report are derived from many sources and collected directly from organizations when available. We would like to thank Downtown property owners and facility managers for sharing information for this report, as well as the following organizations for their assistance: CBRE Group, Inc., City of Jacksonville, Colliers International, Cushman & Wakefield, Duval County Property Appraiser, Downtown Investment Authority, ESRI, JAX Chamber, JAXUSA Partnership, Jacksonville Business Journal, Jacksonville Daily Record, Jacksonville Transportation Authority, Placer.ai, Urban Land Institute, Visit Jacksonville (CVB) and Walkscore. Photography and renderings by: Broadstreet River House, Downtown Investment Authority, Downtown Vision, Hyatt Regency Jacksonville Riverfront, Jacksonville Transportation Authority, Katherine Hardwick, Kram Kran Photo, Lexi Brantman, Robert Futrell, Rummel Munz, Sue Root Barker, The Residences at Barnett and Visit Jacksonville. THANKS TO OUR SUPPORTERS AND SPONSORS ADG Acuity Design Group, Affordable Marijuana License, Banyon Street, Bold City Brewery, The Bread and Board, Cecil W. Powell & Company, Chamblin's Uptown, Connect Agency, Corner Lot Development, Cox Media Group, Cushman & Wakefield, First Coast YMCA, Florida Blue, Foresight Construction, Gate Petroleum, Haskell, Hello Fresh, Iconic Real Estate, iHeartRadio, JAX Chamber, Jacksonville Transportation Authority, Matt Carlucci - State Farm, Moody Williams Appraisal Group, Patrick Krechowski Esq., PNC Bank, PRI Productions, Prosser, Regency Centers, Rummell Munz, Sight & Sound Productions, Sleiman Enterprises, Southeast Group, Steve & Betsy Crosby, The River Club, The Southern Group, Tyrie & Lori Boyer and Wingard. 39 River City Brewing Co. Marina The 2019-2020 State of Downtown Report is a recap of progress and development in Downtown Jacksonville from January 2019 through June 2020. Published by Downtown Vision in August 2020. This report is available for download at: DTJAXREPORTS.COM.  DTJAX.COM    DTJAX 40