Back

How Early GC Involvement Impacts Entitlement Success in Self Storage Development

May 2026 | Dallas, Texas | Authored by MJ Morris, ARCO/Murray

Entitlements have become one of the most influential variables in self-storage development outcomes. In the current development climate where capital is more selective, sites are inherently more constrained, and municipalities are enforcing stricter project requirements, even projects with healthy fundamentals may still fail to move forward due to budget and speed-to-market impacts that arise during entitlements. Across recent self storage work, a consistent pattern emerges: projects that involve a construction partner early in the entitlement process are more likely to move from concept to completion with predictable results.

Entitlements as a Construction-Shaping Phase

Entitlements can often be treated simply as a planning and approvals administrative process. For self storage development today, the potential project impacts represent much more than that. Especially in consideration of many “easy” sites having been picked over today, they now sit at the intersection of:

    • Zoning and land use interpretation
    • Structural feasibility on smaller, irregular sites
    • Fire, access, traffic and parking requirements
    • Stormwater, utilities, and offsite improvements
    • Neighborhood and local political considerations

These issues are tightly linked to how the building will ultimately be constructed, not just how it appears on a site plan. When a construction partner is brought in only after major entitlement decisions have been made, owners may find that key assumptions about massing, access, site design, or end operations are impaired and they have left potential terminal asset value on the table. All of the sudden, that “approval on paper” does not guarantee a viable project.

Treating entitlement as a construction‑shaping phase, and involving a construction partner accordingly, keeps what the various AHJ’s will accept aligned with solutions that are not only buildable, but make sense financially.

How Early Construction Involvement Changes the Risk Profile

When a construction partner is involved from the earliest conversations about a site and its path forward, four practical shifts occur that materially improve project potential success:

    1. Risk Transfer Happens Earlier and With Clearer Lines

Early involvement helps define who owns the path from concept to certificate of occupancy at different milestones along the project lifecycle. It allows entitlement strategy, schedule, and major technical assumptions to be developed with field execution in mind. This makes it possible to transfer risk deliberately and transparently, rather than uncovering it in fragments once drawings are considered “complete.” Earlier identification and subsequent transfer of risk improve the developer’s ability to shore up underwriting and secure capital for the project earlier in the process.

    1. The Owner’s Workload Is Reduced

Modern entitlements require heavy coordination across city staff, consultants, utilities, and community stakeholders. Bringing in a construction partner early allows a meaningful share of that work to be carried by a team equipped to manage municipality comments, consultant coordination, and early logistics planning.

This allows the owner to focus more of their time on lining up capital and even sourcing the next site, while a trained delivery team manages most of the day‑to‑day execution of the entitlement plan.

    1. Constraints Inform Design Instead of Forcing Redesign

Height limits, FAR caps, setbacks, fire access, soil conditions, utility corridors, and neighborhood sensitivities all must be considered in tandem well before a shovel hits the ground. By the time approvals are in hand, those factors are usually addressed on paper, but not always in terms of how the building will actually be constructed and operated.

Involving a construction partner early turns those constraints into active design inputs that connect entitlements to constructability, logistics, and end-user experience. This will result in a better executable plan that protects schedule, preserves rentable SF area, and minimizes the risk of costly late-stage redesign.

    1. Cost and Entitlements Stay Linked, Improving Underwriting Confidence

In a tighter return environment, entitlement decisions need to stay closely linked to budget and delivery schedule. Early construction involvement helps owners evaluate conditions of approval, operability upon completion, and sequencing decisions in real time, creating a clearer view of cost and risk exposure.

Where the Market Is Headed

Self storage development will remain selective and entitlement‑heavy for the foreseeable future, particularly in coastal and urban infill markets where demand is strong but sites are complex. In that context, two trends are increasingly visible:

    • Projects where a construction partner is engaged from day one, helping identify, price, and manage entitlement‑related risk, are more likely to clear internal and external muster and reach completion.
    • Projects where a construction partner is added only after approvals are stamped are more likely to encounter redesign cycles, budget pressure, and schedule slippage, and are at greater risk of stalling out or never breaking ground at all.

For owners and developers aiming to be early movers in the next growth cycle without taking on outsized risk, the implication is straightforward: treat entitlement as a team sport and bring a construction partner into the fold from the outset of the opportunity.

Doing so does not eliminate all risk, but it eliminates some, makes other risks more clear, and generally more manageable long before shovels hit the ground.

Self Storage Contact Us