Ten years ago, many dentists could build out a beautiful office for $100–$150 per square foot. Today, hearing numbers closer to $250 per square foot — and sometimes significantly more — has become the new reality for dental startups, expansions, and relocations. That sticker shock is not just inflation. Dental offices are some of the most infrastructure-heavy healthcare spaces in commercial real estate. A modern dental build-out now includes: Specialized plumbing for every operatory Medical-grade electrical systems Compressed air and vacuum lines Sterilization centers with enhanced ventilation IT infrastructure and digital workflow integration Custom cabinetry and millwork Rising permit, labor, and compliance costs Every additional operatory dramatically increases complexity. In many cases, a single operatory can add tens of thousands of dollars in infrastructure before equipment is even installed. What has changed the most over the past decade? 📈 Labor costs ...
Lenders led by KKR and Blackstone are expected to take control ownership of Affordable Care as part of the restructuring agreement. Importantly though, this does not necessarily mean KKR or BlackRock will directly run day-to-day dental operations themselves. What is happening appears to be more of a classic “lender-to-owner” restructuring that has become increasingly common in private equity and private credit markets when companies become overleveraged. According to Bloomberg, the restructuring would: Reduce roughly 70% of Affordable Care’s debt Hand lenders 100% of the post-reorganization equity Provide new financing and extended maturities Transition ownership control away from existing equity holders One important clarification: Most reports specifically mention Blackstone and KKR as the primary lender groups involved. BlackRock has also been connected to broader private credit market exposure discussions, but the takeover reports themselves primarily identify Bl...