2000 Hollywood Boulevard
Central Hollywood / Dixie Corridor — Retail Building Market
What's Happening Now
Retail market fundamentals improved over the course of 2025, driven by limited new supply, robust backfilling activity, and reduced uncertainty around tariffs and consumer spending. Hollywood follows this national pattern, with the Boulevard corridor and Young Circle area seeing particularly strong leasing activity.Cushman & Wakefield U.S. Shopping Center Report, Jan 2026
Net new construction has slowed substantially. Most leasing activity is filling existing vacancies rather than absorbing new deliveries, which keeps effective rents firm and re-tenant timelines short for landlords with quality space.Cushman & Wakefield, Q4 2025
Hollywood's downtown creative district — anchored by ArtsPark at Young Circle — continues to attract restaurants, boutiques, and experiential retail. Retail storefronts on Hollywood Boulevard and adjacent corridors capitalize on Broward's 2+ million residents and tourism flow from the beach district.The Signature Realty Broward CRE Guide, 2025
Properties within walking distance of the Broadwalk benefit from year-round tourist flow plus a growing residential base. Restaurants and food-and-beverage tenants pay a premium for visibility along the primary Boulevard, Federal Highway, and Ocean Drive corridors.The Signature Realty Broward CRE Guide, 2025
The corridor's stock of 1950s–1970s freestanding retail buildings is increasingly being repositioned — facade updates, interior demising for multiple tenants, and adaptive reuse. Buildings that have been refreshed are commanding meaningful $/SF premiums over unimproved peers.Local market observation
Higher-income households continue spending while lower-income households are under cost pressure. Landlords are skewing tenant selection toward concepts that serve mid-to-higher income consumers — wellness, specialty F&B, and personal services — over discount and middle-market formats.PwC / ULI Emerging Trends 2026
These benchmarks reflect arm's-length transactions and direct-lease asking rents for retail buildings in Central Hollywood / Dixie Corridor and adjacent corridors. Actual value for any specific property depends on its condition, in-place leases, deferred maintenance, and capex history — none of which is captured in submarket benchmarks. A property of this type and size, applied against the above ranges, would derive a value range from public-records math. That derivation is not a Broker's Opinion of Value.
A walkthrough tightens this range significantly.
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Schedule a Walkthrough or call (561) 571-8245Important Disclosures
Not a listing. The property described on this page is not listed for sale or lease by Justin Crow or Mattis Advisors. Justin Crow has no listing authority for this property and does not represent the owner unless explicitly engaged in a written agreement.
Not an appraisal. Nothing on this page constitutes an appraisal, a Broker's Opinion of Value, or a Broker Price Opinion under Florida Statute 475.612. The submarket benchmarks shown are general market observations and are not specific opinions of value for this property.
Public records. All property data is sourced from the Broward County Property Appraiser's public records and is reproduced here for informational purposes. Property data may be inaccurate or out of date. Justin Crow makes no warranty as to the accuracy or completeness of any information on this page.
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About. Justin Crow is a Florida-licensed real estate associate operating under Mattis Advisors. Brokerage activity is conducted through Mattis Advisors.
Central Hollywood retail spans Hollywood Boulevard, Federal Highway (US-1), Dixie Highway, and the Young Circle / ArtsPark district. The corridor mixes legacy 1950s–1970s freestanding storefronts with newer mixed-use redevelopment, particularly around Young Circle. The submarket benefits from Hollywood's creative scene, growing residential population, and proximity to Hollywood Beach.
Hollywood retail rents have outpaced the Broward county average over the past two years, driven by limited new supply, repositioning of older corridors, and steady absorption from local and regional tenants.
Recent transaction data from comparable retail buildings in this segment establishes the following submarket benchmarks: