An Oak Lawn-based marketing company is moving to Dallas' Design District.
Moroch Partners leases headquarters space in the Manufacturing District development located off Irving Boulevard.
The 23,365-square-foot office lease is one of the largest spaces in the redeveloped commercial complex near the Trinity River levees.
The office and retail property at 147 Manufacturing St. is a development by Quadrant Investment Properties.
Moroch Partners is relocating from a high-rise building on Hall Street near Oak Lawn Avenue.
“Moloch's selection of the Manufacturing District as their long-term headquarters location is a great validation for us,” Chad Cook of Quadrant Properties said in a statement. “When we were first designing this project, we had exactly companies like Morochi in mind.”
The company plans to move next year.
Other tenants in the Manufacturing District include Alto, Smart Business Concepts, Kirksey and 84 Lumber. The project is 80% leased.
Transwestern's Paul Whittlef, Kim Brooks, Laney Delin and Colin Verwinkel were negotiated with Savills by Moloch Partners and Jihane Bouley and Clay Vaughn.
Moroch Partners has been in business since 2013 and has clients including McDonald's, Planet Fitness, Six Flags Entertainment, Altitude Trampoline Park, Disney, Sony, Universal, Make-A-Wish Foundation and Midas.
The manufacturing district is a block of repurposed commercial buildings totaling approximately 90,000 square feet. The business district includes an outdoor meeting area, coffee shop, and his second-floor tenant lounge with views of downtown Dallas and nearby Uptown.
It was started three years ago by Quadrant Investment Properties, which is building two offices near the Design District.
Quadrant and partner Maryland-based FCP are building the River Edge Office Building and 1333 Oak Lawn Tower near Irving Boulevard.
The developer recently submitted plans to the city to build a third new office building on more than four acres of Quadrant Management property at 1715 Market Center Boulevard near Oak Lawn Avenue.
Commercial real estate firm Transwestern estimates that the Design District has seen nearly $1 billion in new real estate investment over the past 15 years.