Tag Archives: development
Core UK regional city markets see office rental growth, latest data shows
Growth in prime headline office rents has continued across the UK’s regional property markets with an average increase of 4.3% in the year to June 2015. The growth has been seen across the core eight markets covered by the index from property consultants JLL and reflects a solid outlook for demand and tight supply of new space. The firm says that headline rents are expected to continue on an upward curve with average growth of 2.9% per year in the core regional markets over the period from 2015 to 2019. ‘Sustained levels of occupier demand combined with the decreasing availability of Grade A office supply has contributed to healthy rental growth with year on year increases witnessed in all bar one of the core eight cities,’ said Jeremy Richards, dead of national office agency at JLL. The data shows that Manchester and Leeds saw the most significant increases with rents up by 6.5% year on year to £33 per square foot and by 6% year on year to £26.50 per square feet respectively. According to JLL’s research report office take up across the regional markets reached 3.8 million square feet in the first half of 2015 and is forecast to exceed last year’s full year total of 7.3 million square feet, well ahead of the 10 year average of 6.6 million square feet. The figures also reveal that Manchester and Birmingham dominated activity in the first half of the year accounting for 677,000 square feet or 18% and 650,000 square feet or 17% of take up respectively. The falling supply of good quality office space remains a key theme according to JLL. Available office space across the core markets stands at 19.5 million square feet with an average overall vacancy rate of 8.2%, down from 9.1% over the year. The Grade A vacancy rate is just 2.4% on average, with Leeds and Cardiff the lowest at 1.5% and 1.3% respectively. JLL’s report shows that total pre-leasing jumped sharply in the first six months of the year to 837,000 square feet across 14 transactions in comparison to 138,000 square feet across five deals in the whole of 2014. Some 5.36 million square feet is currently under construction speculatively across the core cities in 58 schemes, which compares to just 3.3 million square feet in the first half of 2014. ‘Partly aided by pre-lets, the development pipeline is now responding to the supply issue with Manchester accounting for the greatest volume of speculative development activity at 875,000 square feet,’ said Richards. Office investment volumes across the core cities hit £1.9 billion, well up on the £1.5 billion traded in the first half of 2014. Domestic investors accounted 74% of investment volumes with the weight of money targeting the regions continuing to place inward pressure on prime yields, which now range between 5% and 5.25% for the largest regional cities,… Continue reading
New development set to boost London’s Canary Wharf as a place to live
Canary Wharf in London is known as being one of Europe’s largest financial services employment clusters but it is also a leading prime London residential market with a new wave of development set to get underway. The new home building is accompanied by new infrastructure and amenities which will reinforce the area’s position as a prime residential address, according to a new report from international real estate Knight Frank. Already home to one of the busiest and most vibrant shopping malls in the city, as well as more than 300 shops, cafés, supermarkets, bars and restaurants, it says that Canary Wharf is already an attractive residential environment as well as a business centre. According Gráinne Gilmore, head of UK residential research at Knight Frank, the development planned for this area, which includes a new primary school, will augment its appeal to a wider demographic, attracting families as well as young professionals, and serve to further change perception away from ‘pied a terre’ to ‘home’. Meanwhile, the opening of Crossrail will enhance Canary Wharf’s connectivity. Property prices in Canary Wharf have risen by 27% since early 2013, comfortably outstripping the 10% growth seen across prime central London over the same time, according to Knight Frank’s index. Gilmore pointed out that such strong growth is partly underpinned by the improving UK economy, something which is also reflected in the commercial property market in Canary Wharf, with vacancy rates falling and upward pressure on office rents. The other effect at play on prices is the return of the ‘ripple effect’, with house price growth spreading outwards from central London, as it did in previous UK housing cycles. ‘However, despite this outperformance in price growth, average values are still significantly lower than those in more established prime residential neighbourhoods in West London,’ said Gilmore. She pointed out that Canary Wharf and its surrounds are also emerging as a hub for culture and entertainment as London’s ‘cultural centre of gravity’ is enhanced by activity in the East. There is a popular arts and events programme already hosted on the Canary Wharf Estate, with live music shows, outdoor dance performances, sporting events, open air theatre and exhibitions. There are 14 schemes of around 400 units or more already under construction or with full planning on the Canary Wharf Estate and nearby on the Isle of Dogs. Some of these schemes are in the very early stages of development and will take some years to deliver. Canary Wharf Group has already begun work on Canary Wharf Residential, a mixed-use scheme of over 3,000 new homes, including over 600 affordable units, a school and a medical centre. The scheme will expand the estate from 100 acres to 122 acres. Berkeley Homes has permission to build a residential tower on Marsh Wall, which, once complete, will be the UK’s tallest residential building, surpassing the 181 meter St George Wharf Tower in Vauxhall. Meanwhile Eco World-Ballymore is constructing twin residential towers at Wardian, just across the… Continue reading
Good design could help make Build to Rent popular in the UK, says a new report
Good design is the secret for the future success of the build to rent sector in the UK with developers needing to look beyond traditional layouts, says a new report. Britain is on the verge of a rental revolution with around £30 billion of institutional investment earmarked to build and manage homes for rent, but success means creating homes that foster a sense of community, according to the report. Indeed, the report ‘Funding Britain’s rental revolution’, by Addleshaw Goddard, a law firm and the British Property Federation, a trade body, says Build to Rent could bring in substantial additional finance for housing. For example, it says that getting tenants to know their neighbours will help encourage them to stay for the long term, saving operators money on costly voids. The key to this will be creating user friendly living areas that encourage circulation within the buildings. It points out that much of the concept around Build to Rent is borrowed from North America’s multifamily sector where listed companies own much of the housing stock. Many of the Build to Rent schemes coming forward will include a range of communal space throughout the buildings and the report suggests this could include top floor amenity decks in the place of penthouse flats allowing all renters to benefit from the views and additional space. Others will be simpler, such as a lobby area with shared seating but the report says that crucially, all schemes need to be of a decent quality. Overall it suggests that the shift towards a professionally run rental market with developments owned by single companies rather than multiple speculators and buy to let investors, promises to offer Britain’s nine million renters higher standards, better value and greater transparency with homes purposefully designed for renters. Institutions such as APG, Hermes, and Legal & General, together with companies such as Grainger, Essential Living and Fizzy Living are spearheading the new sector and the report says that the growth of Build to Rent is good for the economy, communities, investors and consumers. It also points out that extra finance for housing is unlikely to surface through existing house builders or council funded development so Build to Rent could bring in more than £30 billion over the next five years. The positive includes that fact that it allows investors to match to long term liabilities such as annuities or pensions with stable returns delivered from rent and it reduces the amount of debt held by individuals at a time where record low interest rates are set to rise. On top of this Build to Rent investors can take a long term view and residents will be offered long term tenancies since the homes will not be sold off. Also, landlords will encourage tenants to stay by offering onsite amenities and good customer service. In America, this is the way companies seek to beat their competition. Build to Rent has emerged as a separate new asset class, distinct from… Continue reading