A 189,000-square-foot office building in Sunrise is being offered to prospective tenants, adding another large block of available space to Broward County.
Chetu Inc., a global software development company headquartered in Sunrise, has retained Avison Young brokers Justin Cope, Greg Martin and Lisa Blumer to market the five-story building at 1500 Concord Terrace. The property sits within the 22-acre Sawgrass International Corporate Park, a location near Sawgrass Mills and the broader Sawgrass business district.
Chetu currently occupies one full floor totaling about 36,000 square feet. The remaining four floors have reportedly been vacant for several years, creating a rare opportunity for a tenant seeking a full-building presence or a large contiguous office footprint. The owner has indicated it would consider relocating if a user wanted to lease the entire property.
The space is being marketed at roughly $30 per square foot on a triple-net basis and is described as fully built out and immediately available. The property also includes a 7,500-square-foot data center on the first floor, which could appeal to users with technology, operations or infrastructure needs.
Chetu has said it is not leaving the market and remains in growth mode. A company spokesperson stated that the firm is expanding and hiring.
The building is owned by Bansi Properties, the real estate development company led by Chetu CEO Atal Bansal. Bansi Properties acquired the asset for $25 million in 2021, with plans at the time for Chetu to anchor the building while leasing the balance to outside tenants.
The Sunrise property followed Chetu’s earlier development of a 63,000-square-foot headquarters in Plantation, which opened in 2019. The company later said its growth required additional space. Bansi Properties also secured a long-term IRS lease at the Plantation building for the agency’s Broward County office.
The listing comes as Chetu continues to deal with legal fallout from customer disputes. In October, the company was ordered to pay more than $500,000, including punitive damages, in a fraud case involving a Washington state barbershop chain that alleged the company failed to deliver promised software while continuing to collect fees. Chetu appealed the decision in January.
Source: Bisnow







