The office market vacancy rate for the Cleveland market registered 22 percent in the third quarter, up 10 basis points from the previous quarter, according to Grubb & Ellis. Vacancy in Cleveland's West submarket decreased to 24.9 percent, 130 basis points lower than the second quarter. While most of the region's submarkets saw little to no change in vacancy, the South submarket increased to 24.3 percent, 110 basis points higher than the previous quarter. The region posted 16,708 square feet of negative net absorption in the third quarter, lowering positive absorption to 115,416 square feet year to date. On a quarter-over-quarter basis, average asking rental rates for Cleveland's Class A office market increased 18 cents to $21.54 per square foot. During the same time period, average asking rental rates for Class B office space rose 11 cents to $18.02 per square foot. To view the entire report, click here
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Amid the current economic uncertainty, the office market continued to mark positive gains within the third quarter seeing 193,955 sq. ft. of positive absorption. Although well short of pre-recession levels, this quarter’s performance shows a steady increase in leasing velocity as the Orlando market has averaged only 119,881 sq. ft. of quarterly absorption over the past year. The Orlando economy has continued to stabilize. Monthly decreases in unemployment have become somewhat of a trend as the latest local unemployment statistics for August saw a year-over-year decrease from 11.7% to 10.3%. This sustained trend does wonders for local economic sentiment, especially among small business owners whose bottom line is highly dependent on the spending habits of other businesses within the local market. The Orlando CBD saw another quarter of positive absorption with Class B space leading the submarket to a total net gain of 26,352 sq. ft. Maitland Center is also beginning to show improvement with 31,289 sq. ft. of positive absorption. The majority of this quarter’s positive gains were seen in the Southwest submarket which absorbed 93,145 sq. ft. of space amid a mix of expansion and new tenants. Average rental rates rose slightly to $20.68 overall. Also noteworthy this …
It’s no secret that Cincinnati has a beautiful landscape, a world-class arts and culture scene, and a rich history, but it is little known for its vibrant business community. Cincinnati is truly located in the “heart of it all” and many people are indeed surprised by the economic influence that exudes from this market. Cincinnati is the 24th largest U.S. metro area with a population of just over 2 million. Cincinnati is home to ten Fortune 500 company headquarters, and, per capita, that places the city higher than New York, Boston, Chicago, or Los Angeles. Kroger Company, Procter & Gamble and Macy's Inc. are all headquartered in the city and it has recently been chosen as the North American headquarters for First Group and dunnhumby, both of which have tapped into the local labor pool. With the strength of the city’s business community, Cincinnati’s office market has been relatively stable over the last 15 years, with overall vacancy rates hovering around 15 percent. Unfortunately, it has not been immune to the economic woes of the last several years and many companies have made cuts or downsized. The Cincinnati office market is approximately 37 million square feet and around 13 million …
For a city that has at times been portrayed as emblematic of the kind of economic fallout left in the wake of the recent recessionary cycle, Detroit is actually responding quite well. The current state of the Detroit office market is just one data point — but it’s a promising one. In greater Detroit — and across Southeast Michigan — there are tentative signs that things are moving in the right direction for the first time in several years. Not everything is positive by any stretch of the imagination, but the progress, while tentative, looks genuine. Since the city’s office market bottomed out in the summer of 2010, it has been slowly and steadily recovering. There were a few low points in August and September of last year, but the market began absorbing some space toward the end of the year, and that trend has continued in the first part of 2011. As you might expect, however, the progress has been uneven. Consolidation areas like Southfield, where there is a lot more activity in the marketplace, have generally done slightly better than destination-focused markets like Dearborn and Livonia, which had taken a more significant initial blow and subsequently have not …
The commercial real estate market in Fairfield County reflects the issues affecting the greater national economy. Due to the fundamentals of commercial real estate and how the marketplace functions, the region will be in a state of malaise for the foreseeable future. The marketplace has bottomed, however, and will improve over time. From 2005 through mid 2008, employment was increasing, companies were expanding; there was competition to put money to work through loans and investments. Capital formation grew at a torrid pace as the national capitalistic system sought higher and higher returns in a market where the risk seemed to diminish each month. As that feel-good locomotive hit the wall in 2008, there were tremendous lay-offs and all capital sources that had been pushing money at the real estate asset class evaporated. In the first three quarters of 2009, tenants stopped conducting real estate business almost altogether. Even tenants driven by lease expirations often opted for short-term renewals due to the cataclysmic uncertainties that decision makers were facing. Additionally, tenant renewals were driven by give-backs of space as companies needed less space due to fewer employees. Companies took space proactively in 2007 because they anticipated hiring more employees, but they …
The Los Angeles creative office market sector was certainly not immune to the timid economy, which continued during the third quarter. The limited number of creative companies experiencing growth through this period was limited and representative of the economy as a whole. However, the creative product type — the preferred space sought by the production, post-production, advertising/marketing and even technology sectors — was also surprisingly supply constrained. Due in large part to the lack of new construction or large-scale conversion of old industrial buildings into creative office, tenants entering the marketplace with hopes of finding numerous attractive options and generous business terms in a more tenant-favored climate instead found limited product to meet their needs from a functional and/or aesthetic standpoint. Although buoyed by a market that was experiencing meek demand, many businesses that view their office space as much in terms of the environment it creates for the attraction and retention of creative talent were prevented from realizing the true benefits of a tenant-favored market due to a lack of supply. Those that made moves during the end of 2009 and earlier this year absorbed much of the attractive, ready-for-occupancy space at more aggressive pricing from landlords looking to …
The St. Louis office market continues to see a relatively slow pace of activity. As the economic downturn hit the market slightly later than the rest of the country, the recovery is also delayed, and companies continue to be cautious, with renewals dominating the leasing market. As of the end of the third quarter, the market-wide vacancy rate was 16.3 percent, slightly lower than second-quarter figures. The vacancy rate has stayed steady between 15.5 and 16.5 percent for the past 5 quarters. Firms continue to employ the blend-and-extend strategy of extending leases before the expiration date and locking in a lower lease rate at the same time. While asking rates have remained relatively steady, effective rates are lower than 2 or 3 years ago, and concessions, including free rent, are still being used by landlords to entice potential tenants in most submarkets. Much of the activity within the marketplace is being seen at smaller sizes, between 3,000 and 5,000 square feet, with a dearth of large tenants in the market. Exceptions to this include Panera Bread, which recently leased 71,130 square feet at 3630 South Geyer Road. Recently, the St. Louis office market was dominated by the moves of several …
The Las Vegas office market features a number of unique characteristics. For example, the Class A office market is not concentrated into a central business district. Office users in the downtown area consist almost exclusively of tenants that require proximity to the courts or government offices. Consequently, the tenant mix is limited to uses associated with litigation and government services. Other Class A tenants are spread around the valley at projects such as Hughes Center, a location favored by financial services, gaming interests and transactional law firms. The pool of Class A tenants is relatively shallow, measuring 6.2 million square feet or 13 percent of the overall office market. Reasons include a narrow economic focus — primarily gaming and tourism — and a lack of regional or national corporate headquarters. Consequently, speculative development and operation of Class A office space favors local players (i.e., developers, lenders and brokers). The speculative office pipeline for Las Vegas is dry except for one notable project. Tivoli Village, a 750,000-square-foot retail/office project, is anticipated to deliver its first phase in October. Despite office vacancy in excess of 20 percent, the developers, a partnership between IDB Group of Israel and local developer EHB Companies, have …
Greater Cleveland’s office market is showing some signs of recovery, and this is being fueled by the many development projects in the works. Planned developments include a casino to be located in the Tower City area opening sometime in 2013 and a proposed Medical Mart facility, which will be located next to Cleveland’s convention center in the heart of downtown. Another projected office development is the East Bank project by Scott Wolstein, which will house the national headquarters for Ernst & Young and law firm Tucker-Ellis. The project will be the first phase of a planned office, retail and residential development at the edge of Cleveland’s historic warehouse district. Eaton Corporation also is planning a new 400,000-square-foot campus in the Chagrin Highland’s 630-acre corporate community on Cleveland’s east side, which will leave Eaton’s current building at 12th Street and Superior, in the central business district, with more than 300,000 square feet available. Other major deals in the works are the relocation of Huntington Bank (approximately 100,000 square feet) from its namesake historic property at East 9th Street and Euclid to the former BP building, which is now 200 Public Square. The iconic bank building is home to several large firms …
Office development in the Minneapolis market is virtually at a standstill. Since the economy’s downturn, many projects have been shelved, and developers today are striving to locate aggressively priced, dispossessed buildings that can be repositioned and brought back to life for the next real estate cycle. The exceptions are highly visible build-to-suit projects. In September, Acosta, a sales and marketing company, plans to move into a new 65,000-square-foot building in the southwest suburb of Eden Prairie. Additionally, the law firm Hellmuth & Johnson is building 44,000 square feet of office space, topping three levels of covered parking at the intersection of Interstate 494 and Highway 169, also in Eden Prairie. Shadow space is an underlying issue affecting development in the Twin Cities. Until companies can absorb space they already lease but currently maintain as vacant, the development cycle will remain flat. Leasing activity is also quiet. Those businesses that are relocating are typically consolidating or otherwise downsizing. However, the U.S. General Services Administration is in the market for nearly 500,000 square feet of office space. Half of that is being spurred by a short-term need to relocate workers displaced by a $115 million federal stimulus funded renovation of the Bishop …