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406 N Avenue D - San Luis Detention Center Immeuble • Spécialité • À vendre • San Luis, AZ 85336



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Faits saillants de l'investissement
- 870-bed detention facility
- Additional demand generated by U.S. Customs and Border Protection placements from several border sectors and ports of entry, including San Diego, Yuma
- Potential for longer-term occupancy from ICE detainees tied to California immigration court backlogs
- Current population supported by multiple federal agencies, with the U.S. Marshals Service and ICE serving as the primary detainee sources
- Positioned to benefit from out-of-state detention demand, including recent U.S. Marshals placements from New Mexico
- Facility originally opened in 2007 and expanded in 2011, increasing capacity from approximately 450 beds to 870 beds
Résumé de l'annonce
The facility originally opened in 2007 and is reported to be in solid condition. A 2011 expansion increased capacity from approximately 450 to 870 beds through an adjacent structure connected to the main building by an outdoor walkway. Housing consists of roughly 96 single-bed cells and dormitory-style units accommodating 12, 24, and 48 detainees, with assignments used as part of a de-escalation strategy. The facility is connected to City of San Luis water and sewer and includes a full complement of operational infrastructure: a commercial kitchen with walk-in refrigeration, freezer, and dry storage; dedicated laundry facilities with four industrial washers and three industrial dryers; a medical area with examination, recovery, suicide-watch, and negative-pressure isolation rooms; intake space; virtual immigration hearing rooms; a barber shop; commissary; staff training and break areas; agency offices; two control rooms; and eight outdoor recreation areas.
Full occupancy requires approximately 204 employees, including 24 medical personnel, four maintenance staff, and five food-service employees, with the remainder being correctional and operational staff. Staffing scales with average occupancy, travel nurse dependency has been eliminated, and costs have normalized. On the revenue side, the U.S. Marshals Service and ICE are the two primary contracting agencies and together account for the substantial majority of facility revenue. The facility is contractually required to maintain 100 beds reserved for ICE at all times, with the Marshals holding placement priority. Smaller populations are also placed by U.S. Customs and Border Protection, with recent placements tied to the San Diego, Yuma, Calexico, San Luis, and San Ysidro border sectors and ports of entry. Each agency pays separately under its applicable contract. Notably, New Mexico legislation restricting local participation in detention contracts has begun pushing federal agencies to secure beds out of state, representing a potential additional demand source for the facility. Management also expects that California court backlogs and limited in-state detention capacity could drive increased demand from California-related ICE detainees over time.
Full occupancy requires approximately 204 employees, including 24 medical personnel, four maintenance staff, and five food-service employees, with the remainder being correctional and operational staff. Staffing scales with average occupancy, travel nurse dependency has been eliminated, and costs have normalized. On the revenue side, the U.S. Marshals Service and ICE are the two primary contracting agencies and together account for the substantial majority of facility revenue. The facility is contractually required to maintain 100 beds reserved for ICE at all times, with the Marshals holding placement priority. Smaller populations are also placed by U.S. Customs and Border Protection, with recent placements tied to the San Diego, Yuma, Calexico, San Luis, and San Ysidro border sectors and ports of entry. Each agency pays separately under its applicable contract. Notably, New Mexico legislation restricting local participation in detention contracts has begun pushing federal agencies to secure beds out of state, representing a potential additional demand source for the facility. Management also expects that California court backlogs and limited in-state detention capacity could drive increased demand from California-related ICE detainees over time.
Faits sur la propriété
| Type de vente | Investissement | Taille du bâtiment | 160 000 pi² |
| Type de propriété | Spécialité | Nombre d’étages | 1 |
| Taille du lot | 23,90 AC | Année de construction/rénovation | 2009/2011 |
| Type de vente | Investissement |
| Type de propriété | Spécialité |
| Taille du lot | 23,90 AC |
| Taille du bâtiment | 160 000 pi² |
| Nombre d’étages | 1 |
| Année de construction/rénovation | 2009/2011 |
1 1
Exceptionnellement adapté aux voitures
100/100
Relativement accessible en vélo
20/100
Impôts fonciers
| Numéro de lot | 227-11-003 | Évaluation des bâtiments | 4 717 336 $ CAD |
| Évaluation du terrain | 162 998 $ CAD | Évaluation totale | 4 880 334 $ CAD |
Impôts fonciers
Numéro de lot
227-11-003
Évaluation du terrain
162 998 $ CAD
Évaluation des bâtiments
4 717 336 $ CAD
Évaluation totale
4 880 334 $ CAD
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406 N Avenue D - San Luis Detention Center
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