What will fill empty NJ office space? See the creative ideas at the Jersey Shore
Red Bank Veterinary Hospital is converting a four-story office building on Schulz Drive in Middletown to become a new hospital.
Red Bank Veterinary Hospital is converting a four-story office building on Schulz Drive in Middletown to become a new hospital.

What do you do when large tenants aren't there to lease office space in your big empty office building?

Do something else with it. Maybe you can turn it into a medical building or demolish it to build a warehouse, convert it a mixed-use space with retail on the ground floor, or build housing instead.

It's called "adaptive reuse," and developers are turning to it as they seek to fill or repurpose large vacant spaces, whether it be a tired building in downtown Red Bank or a large old corporate campus in Holmdel.

"During and after COVID, there was a lot less demand for large office space, so the owners had look for some alternative uses to be able to fill up the buildings," said Suzanne Macnow, senior vice president at CBRE, a commercial real estate brokerage.

Dead shopping centers: What's planned in these Monmouth and Ocean towns to bring them back to life

"When you have a 100,000-square-foot vacant building, they are not easy to fill out with" tenants who want 25,000 square feet, she said.

Looking for examples? Construction is underway for a new Red Bank Veterinary Hospital at 100 Shulze Drive, converting a four-story building at River Centre, an office complex off of Newman Springs Road in Middletown, said Macnow, who brokered the deal.

Monmouth Medical Center's Vogel Medical Campus at Tinton Falls is being built on the footprint of what was formerly the old sprawling Myer Center and Night Vision Lab at Fort Monmouth.

Monmouth Medical Center has broken ground on the Vogel Medical Campus, a $200 million project on the former site of Fort Monmouth.
Monmouth Medical Center has broken ground on the Vogel Medical Campus, a $200 million project on the former site of Fort Monmouth.

More changes coming: Plans tweaked for second medical building at redeveloped Monmouth Mall

How did we get here? It started in the 1980s, with a spree of office construction the likes that New Jersey had never seen.

"We are seeing the aging of what was once the greatest office building boom in the history of New Jersey," said economist James Hughes, dean emeritus of the Edward J. Bloustein School of Planning and Public Policy at Rutgers University. By 1990, 80% of the inventory of office space in the Garden State was built during that 10-year period.

White-collar work grew, fueling the need for large office spaces. But innovation in information technology, such as the development of more powerful computer chips and desktop computers, the internet and the smartphone, began to herald a change, Hughes said.

"We didn't have to have legions of clerks doing all sorts of work," Hughes said. "All of that was automated."

The mother warehouse: Got an Amazon package at the Jersey Shore? See inside where it probably came from

'Overbuilt and underdemolished'

The COVID-19 pandemic, which darkened office buildings in 2020, changed it all. Employees worked from home. Meetings were held over Zoom or Microsoft Teams.