701 SE 6th Ave

SITE PLANS

Site Plan

Properties for Lease

701 SE 6th Ave

Address

701 SE 6th Ave
Suite 102 & 202
Delray Beach, FL 33483
United States

(View Map)

Property Type: Office
Base Rent: $20/PSF NNN
Listing Status: Active

Contact Info

Gary Broidis
Direct: (561)703-9298
gary@atlanticcg.com

View Flyer

Property Description

This Class B office building contains 2 stories and approximately 13,000 square feet of office space. There are currently two 1,500 SF office spaces available for lease on the ground floor & 2nd floor.

 These office spaces are perfect for any group of professionals or for a corporate office.

Location Description

Located only 6 blocks south of downtown Atlantic Avenue, this location offers numerous food, drink and shopping locations within minutes of this property. Locally owned and managed since 1983.

Additional Information Site Highlights
County: Palm Beach
Building Size: 13,012 SF
Operating Expenses: $16.81/PSF + Electric (Janitorial Included)
Min. Divisible Space: 1,500 SF
Max. Contiguous Space: 1,500 SF
Total SF Available: 1,500 SF
Year Built: 1982
Lot Size: 0.73 Acres

Extremely Attractive Lease Terms

Lowest Rate in Downtown Delray Beach

Highly Visible to Federal Highway

Ample Parking for all Tenants

Recent News

Francesca’s files for bankruptcy; closing all stores

After 25 years of operations, Houston-based women's clothing and accessories chain Francesca's filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in the U.S. Bankruptcy Court for the District of New Jersey, with plans to close all approximately 400 stores across 45 states and liquidate. The filing came after a convergence of factors including a 2023 data breach, failed investments in non-core brands, supply chain disruptions after two major suppliers lost their own funding, and the failure of an anticipated capital infusion in December 2025. The company carries about $30.1 million in secured debt, with between $10 million and $50 million in consolidated assets and approximately 1,000 to 5,000 creditors, including landlords Simon Property Group and Tanger Properties listed among its top 30 unsecured creditors. This marks the second bankruptcy filing in six years for Francesca's, which was previously sold out of bankruptcy in January 2021 to an affiliate of private equity firm TerraMar Capital for $18 million.

What to watch in retail in 2026

Retail industry trends for 2026 include continued AI adoption for product research and customer service, value-seeking consumers driving traffic to discount retailers, and shopping malls experiencing a rebound with renewed investment in mixed-use projects. Mall foot traffic increased in 2025, with indoor malls seeing a 1.8% rise in visits and visit durations up 3.3% compared to the first half of 2024, as traditional retail shopping centers transform into destinations for entertainment and experiences. Industry executives remain optimistic, with 96% expecting revenue growth and 81% anticipating margin expansion in 2026, despite challenges including weakened consumer buying power, high interest rates, and competition from mass merchants and value retailers. Specialty retailers face particular vulnerability in 2026 as high interest rates, shifts toward online shopping, and aggressive competition from mass merchants are predicted to push overleveraged companies into bankruptcy.

Bain & Co.: U.S. retail sales to grow 3.5% in 2026

U.S. retail sales are projected to grow 3.5% year-over-year in 2026 to reach $5.3 trillion, slightly down from estimated 4.0% growth in 2025, according to Bain & Company's 2026 Global Retail Sales Outlook. Volume growth will remain modest with inflation projected between 2.6% and 3.0%, as mounting consumer strain and declining confidence affect spending amid economic uncertainty, rising unemployment, and slowing labor supply growth. Bain's Consumer Health Index found that sentiment among higher-income U.S. households, who account for more than half of retail spending, declined in January 2026. The report notes that shoppers increasingly gravitating toward lower-priced and private label goods could create a "flight to value" that tempers nominal sales growth, though reduced taxes, declining fuel prices, and potential interest rate cuts could bolster consumer sentiment and spending power.