MetroNational has joined with Radom Capital and Triten Real Estate Partners to acquire the M-K-T mixed-use development in Houston’s Heights neighborhood. The partnership has taken control of the 214,000-square-foot project, which brings together retail, restaurants and boutique office space within a single adaptive reuse setting.
M-K-T opened in 2021 and is described as a redevelopment of several former warehouse buildings along the Shepherd Drive corridor. According to reporting from the Houston Business Journal, the conversion created a new mixed-use destination that blends creative office environments with a roster of consumer-facing tenants.
The project features approximately 100,000 square feet of Class A creative office space, complemented by more than 100,000 square feet dedicated to retail and dining uses. The configuration is designed to integrate workplace and lifestyle offerings across the campus, all within repurposed industrial structures.
M-K-T was designed by the Michael Hsu Office of Architecture, an architecture firm known for its work on experiential and design-forward commercial spaces. The design approach at M-K-T focuses on reusing existing buildings while creating contemporary spaces for office tenants, retailers and restaurants.
Radom Capital and Triten Real Estate Partners, which were already closely associated with the property, will continue as active partners in M-K-T following the acquisition. Their ongoing role underscores continuity in the project’s vision and execution, even as the ownership structure evolves to include MetroNational as the lead entity in the purchasing group.
The tenant roster at M-K-T includes a mix of national and regional brands. Named tenants include Lululemon, Sweetgreen, Mendocino Farms, Ray-Ban and La La Land Kind Café, indicating a concentration of lifestyle, dining and retail concepts that cater to both office users and neighborhood visitors.
In addition to their involvement with M-K-T, Radom Capital and Triten Real Estate Partners are also credited with the conversion of the former Swift meatpacking plant into a 60,000-square-foot center. That separate project is dedicated to a combination of retail, office and restaurant space, further illustrating their focus on repositioning older industrial properties for contemporary commercial uses.
While financial details of the M-K-T acquisition were not disclosed in the available information, the transaction highlights the continued institutional interest in well-located, design-driven mixed-use assets that combine creative office space with a curated retail and dining lineup.
The post MetroNational, Partners Acquire M-K-T Mixed-Use Development in Houston Heights appeared first on CRE Market Beat.
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