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鶹ýӳleads nation in new office towers opening

Growth of hybrid work raises demand for top-tier downtown space as employers entice workers back to the office
鶹ýӳCentre 2. png
鶹ýӳCentre II at 733 Seymour: one the largest office towers to complete in Canada in 2022. |GWL Realty Advisors”

More new office space will open in 鶹ýӳthis year than in every other major Canadian city, combined.

This reflects the fact that, with the exception of Toronto, 鶹ýӳis the only city where new office towers were completing in the second quarter (Q2) as developers in most markets face higher vacancy rates and the spectre of work-from-homers not returning to their cubicles.

As of the second quarter of 2022, the national office vacancy rate was 16.2 per cent, but it was just 9.4 per cent in Metro Vancouver, according to Altus Group’s Canadian Office Market Update, released August 2.

Vancouver’s downtown vacancy rate was 8.4 per cent in the second quarter, according to a new report from JLL Canada.

One of largest office building to complete in Canada this year is 鶹ýӳCentre II in downtown Vancouver, which officially opens in Q4 2020 The 33-storey tower at 733 Seymour Street, boasts 370,000 square feet of Class A offices. The building, by GWL Realty Advisors with the Healthcare Ontario Pension Plan, is also Platinum LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) and WELL certified.

鶹ýӳand Toronto were the only two cities with office building completions in the second quarter.

鶹ýӳhad a 42.5 per cent availability rate with 447,508 square feet of the area occupied across its four buildings. Meanwhile, Toronto had an availability rate of 30.6 per cent across its four buildings which occupied 174,983 square feet of space.

Across Canada, there are 78 office buildings under construction, totalling less than 17 million square feet, with an availability rate of 37 per cent.

鶹ýӳhad 29 buildings under construction as of Q2 2022, occupying just over five million square feet with a pre-leased rate of almost 60 per cent.

Altus noted that new Class A office space is leading demand as employers leverage quality amenities to encourAGE employees to come back into offices.

“The proportion of workers with a hybrid work arrangement increased, continuing their upward trend from January 2022. This further illustrates that people are transitioning slowly back into working from their offices,” said Ray Wong, vice-president, data, at Atlus Group, who co-authored the office update with senior analyst Mahek Shah of Altus Insights.  

This trend is apparent in Vancouver, according to JLL, which noted that several sizeable deals were signed in Q2 in new downtown office builds.

“Lululemon committed to 120,000 square feet in 1280 Burrard Street and Microsoft is rumoured to be taking 400,000 square feet in 1090 West Pender Street, the B6 development that already had some pre-lease commitments that needed to be shuffled to accommodate this requirement,” JLL stated in its recent office insight report.

Increasing construction costs and labour shortages continued to push back completion dates on several under construction office projects, which has raised demand for turnkey and sublease spaces the report added.

Sublease space available in downtown 鶹ýӳfell to 600,000 square feet in the second quarter, the lowest level in two years, noted Shawna Rogowski, a JLL research analyst.

“While uncertainty exists regarding the economic situation, rising interest rates, large inflation numbers and widespread talk of a recession, Metro 鶹ýӳcontinues to boast the lowest vacancy rate in the major North American office markets, demonstrating continued confidence in the market,” Rogowski added.