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  #341  
Old Posted Feb 18, 2017, 7:02 PM
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Originally Posted by Changing City View Post
I'm glad you quoted Colliers numbers, and not any of the other brokers. At least they put the Tech Centre and Renfrew Centre into the Broadway figures, while many of the other brokers call them 'Burnaby' (and CBRE put Marine Gateway into the Richmond data).
Geography and market competitive subset would support CBRE's methodology. Renfrew and Broadway Tech compete more with Burnaby than West Broadway, and similarly so for Marine Gateway and Richmond.

What you'd support makes as little sense as calling Yonge Street a single competitive market.
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  #342  
Old Posted Feb 18, 2017, 8:39 PM
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What you'd support makes as little sense as calling Yonge Street a single competitive market.[/QUOTE]

What are you suggesting here - is Yonge Street in Burnaby or Richmond?

Obviously it makes sense to put the Tech Centre (on East Broadway, in Vancouver) into the Burnaby market for market comparisons, but it completely confuses any discussion about whether more office development is being built in Burnaby or Vancouver.
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  #343  
Old Posted May 16, 2017, 9:57 PM
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Avigilon doubles its money on sale of the William Farrell Building:

https://renx.ca/avigilon-downtown-va...r-office-sale/
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  #344  
Old Posted Aug 16, 2017, 9:43 PM
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The gold towers on Kingsway are up for sale:

Quote:
Metro Vancouver’s Kingsway headquarters on the sales block
By Peter Mitham | Aug. 16, 2017, 9 a.m.

Metro Vancouver is making good on its plans not to be a landlord when it vacates its current premises at 4330 Kingsway and 5945 Kathleen Avenue in Burnaby later this year. The regional district listed its properties with CBRE Ltd. last week, hoping to have the properties sold soon after it moves its staff to Metrotower III in late October.
...
https://www.biv.com/article/2017/8/m...s-sales-block/
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  #345  
Old Posted Oct 24, 2017, 9:59 PM
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WeWork to lease and convert to office the top floor(s) of HBC

As part of an interesting deal, WeWork has bought the NYC flagship store of Lord & Taylor for $850M USD and will get the right to lease and market the top floor(s) of downtown HBC/Lord & Taylor-owned stores in several major cities, including Vancouver.

WeWork offers office space on short-term leases, primarily in co-working formats.

Quote:
WeWork's New York deal sends waves through Vancouver commercial real estate sector
Derrick Penner
Published on: October 24, 2017 | Last Updated: October 24, 2017 2:33 PM PDT

Commercial real estate firm WeWork’s $1-billion purchase of the Hudson’s Bay Co.’s flagship Lord and Taylor store is making waves in New York and will send ripples through Vancouver’s commercial real-estate market.

The deal will see WeWork, which packages shared office space for short-term users, gain access to upper-floor office space in the Hudson’s Bay’s historic Granville Street store in downtown Vancouver, which could be a bit of a relief valve for the firm’s recently opened venture in the city.

WeWork leased seven floors in the Bentall III tower downtown earlier this year, most of which was quickly snapped up by online retail giant Amazon to expand its already substantial presence in Vancouver, according to a report in the Financial Post.

That development left WeWork scrambling to find additional office space in an increasingly squeezed downtown real-estate market to execute its plans to serve the city’s growing technology and creative sectors.

This morning, Commercial Real Estate Firm CBRE reported that Vancouver’s downtown office vacancy rate has dropped to five per cent, the lowest rate since 2013, when the city was in the middle of its biggest office building boom in the last two decades.

Richard Baker, HBC’s executive chairman and interim CEO, said Tuesday the deals will strengthen the retailer and “enable us to drive ongoing value creation.”

In New York, The Lord & Taylor flagship location will eventually house a smaller store as well as WeWork’s headquarters for its operations, which provide working space and services for more than 150,000 members around the world.

Besides Vancouver, WeWork will lease the upper floors of two other HBC department stores: the Queen Street location in Toronto and Galeria Kaufhof in Frankfurt.

[...]
http://vancouversun.com/business/com...-estate-sector
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  #346  
Old Posted Oct 31, 2017, 9:55 PM
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Downtown Vancouver offices to test price ceiling
https://www.biv.com/article/2017/10/...price-ceiling/
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  #347  
Old Posted Nov 1, 2017, 5:31 PM
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Originally Posted by officedweller View Post
Downtown Vancouver offices to test price ceiling
https://www.biv.com/article/2017/10/...price-ceiling/
Yup. You need average rents in the higher 40s to barely support new development.
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  #348  
Old Posted Nov 15, 2017, 1:11 AM
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Anvil almost fully leased; AI set to retool office tower functions
https://www.biv.com/article/2017/11/...ol-office-tow/
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  #349  
Old Posted Nov 15, 2017, 6:40 AM
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  #350  
Old Posted Nov 15, 2017, 7:09 AM
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Wow, thanks for posting.
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  #351  
Old Posted Nov 15, 2017, 7:23 AM
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!

Quote:
Originally Posted by Monolith View Post
Its time to laugh again!!!!


See officedweller! There is ALWAYS a market for strata office space. Not everybody is about tax strategies, room for expansions and so on. Good ole fashion "pride of ownership" and "investment opportunities" can triumph over such things anyday.
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  #352  
Old Posted Nov 15, 2017, 7:25 AM
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Originally Posted by Monolith View Post
It mentions two towers that have started construction without pre leases, which ones are they talking about?
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  #353  
Old Posted Nov 15, 2017, 9:18 AM
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Quote:
Douglas College expands into Anvil Centre Office Tower

Theresa McManus New West RecordNovember 14, 2017 11:28 AM

The Anvil Centre Office Tower's location at Eighth and Columbia streets provides great views of downtown New Westminster. Douglas College has announced it will be leasing four floors in the building, as part of a plan to address its future student needs.

Douglas College students will be calling Anvil Centre home in 2018.

Douglas College has announced it’s adding a second campus in downtown New Westminster at the Anvil Centre Office Tower. The college will lease 66,000 square feet (6,132) of space in the building at 11 Eighth St. to support anticipated growth in enrolment during the next three to five years.

"Douglas College is growing and growing. This expansion comes just in time," Douglas College president Kathy Denton said in a press release. "It's an exciting chance to develop new learning opportunities for our students through our degree, post-degree and diploma programs. It also gives us space we need to upgrade our existing campus in New Westminster and plan for the future."

Douglas College Anvil Centre will open mid-summer 2018 and will welcome students for the fall semester next September. Covering four floors, the campus will include 21 new classrooms, a host of new student-collaboration spaces and a simulation lab for “financial and Amazon-style supply chain management modelling” that will expose students to the pressures and realities of these fields.

According to Douglas College, the new space will also include flexible collaboration rooms that transition to the needs of individual instructors, quiet study and group project areas for students, as well as faculty and administration offices.

"The Anvil Campus Centre will be a wonderful new space that will draw students from every corner of the province to Douglas College," Advanced Education, Skills and Training Minister Melanie Mark said in a press release. "This expansion helps Douglas College continue to provide the education and training students need to open the doors of opportunity."

Douglas College business student Supun Thalagala thinks it’s a good move for the college.

"Expanding to the Anvil Centre will give students more space to study, prepare for class, and connect after class," she said in a press release. "And, the best thing is, it's so close to the New Westminster main campus and to the SkyTrain.”

The City of New Westminster completed construction of the Anvil Centre civic facility and office tower in the fall of 2014.
http://www.newwestrecord.ca/news/dou...wer-1.23093482
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  #354  
Old Posted Nov 15, 2017, 6:42 PM
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Originally Posted by Monolith View Post
A quote from this article:

"In the third quarter, Vancouver had 1.6 million square feet of office space under construction.However, with the recent announcement that construction has begun on two towers speculatively without pre-leases in place, the starting gun has been fired on the city’s next development cycle. It is expected that five new office towers will be announced soon."

that should make people happy in this forum
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  #355  
Old Posted Nov 15, 2017, 11:19 PM
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Originally Posted by osirisboy View Post
It mentions two towers that have started construction without pre leases, which ones are they talking about?
One is probably Burrard Landing.
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  #356  
Old Posted Nov 16, 2017, 12:27 PM
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Originally Posted by retro_orange View Post
As they saying goes..."If you build it, they will come". This is the ultimate example! The City of New Westminster gambled on building the Anvil Centre, people criticized and laughed, and yet there you have it!
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  #357  
Old Posted Nov 16, 2017, 1:12 PM
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Happy to hear the two recent pieces of office news (320 Granville and Anvil Centre).

Douglas College is a great tenant for the building and might come to take the whole building in time as leases come up for renewal and the City looks to backfill tenant churn. Despite being a substantial post secondary institution, it's always seemed to me that it's barely made an impact on the feel and vibrancy of New West. I would love to see it undertake a substantial expansion/redevelopment programe in the coming years to further leverage its transit accessibility.

320 Granville is going to be a great addition to the CBD. I, too, would have liked it to be taller and also include below-grade retail but maybe it's a case if getting a bitnolder but I just don't get as invested ir upset as I used to be when a project comes to fruition but isn't as big or tall as it ought to be. I sure hope that the market validation of the project helps trigger the Waterfront Hub project and additional strata office development as part of mixed use towers a la the Georgia hotel tower and the BC Physicians and Surgeons' purchase of the office component of that building.
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  #358  
Old Posted Nov 17, 2017, 9:24 AM
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I missed this:

Quote:
Anvil Centre Office Tower finally filling up

Theresa McManus / New West RecordNovember 16, 2017 03:46 PM



City officials are thrilled that the Anvil Centre office tower is 93 per cent leased. The city sold the office tower in March 2014 and completed construction of the building in the fall of 2014, but it's sat empty until now.
Photograph By File

It’s taken time, but the Anvil Centre office tower is filling up with tenants.

The City of New Westminster completed the $86.4 million Anvil Centre civic facility and office tower in the fall of 2014. In March 2014, the city announced it had sold the office tower to a company owned by businessmen Suki Sekhon of the CRS Group of Companies and Joseph Segal of Kingswood Capital Corporation.

In July 2017, Cushman & Wakefield, which is overseeing leasing of the building, confirmed the building’s first tenant. Evolution Gaming, an international online gaming company, will be leasing the 12th floor.

Douglas College has announced it will be leasing four floors in the building as a second campus in New Westminster. The college will lease 66,000 square feet on floors six, seven, eight and nine.

“We are basically 93 per cent leased now,” said Roger Leggatt of Cushman & Wakefield. “The Century Group has taken the 10th floor; they are a development company. Aerotek, which is like an HR staffing company, have taken about 5,000 square feet on the 11th floor. Land Titles and Survey Authority is on five.”

According to Leggatt, 10,000 square feet on the 11th floor is the remaining space to be leased.

Mayor Jonathan Cote said the city is pleased the Anvil Centre office tower is now 93 per cent leased and has five tenants.

“It is critically important to the City of New Westminster,” he said about having tenants in the building. “Although we had sold the office tower a number of years ago, one of the main objectives of the office tower being built in the first place was really to provide more employment opportunities and bring more vibrancy to downtown New Westminster. Definitely seeing the tower finally getting leased up is going to be able to see that component of that building start to fit the vision that we had for the area.”

In 2015, Sekhon told the Record there had been some “keen interest” in the office space, but the owners had a long-term vision and wanted to lease it up with quality tenants.

“You don’t want to put in tenants for the sake of putting them in,” he said. “We prefer to have a good tenant mix there.”

Leggatt said the owners’ patience has “certainly paid off” with regards to waiting for the right people and the right deals. Because it’s very difficult to find good-quality space on SkyTrain, he said it was just a matter of timing as to when the space would be leased.

“They have exceeded rent expectations. They have done very well at securing very good-quality tenants and all very long-term commitments for the building. They have achieved all of those goals,” he said. “Most of the commitments are 10 years or so.”

Cote said it took “a little bit longer than we had hoped” to secure the tenants, but the city knew the market would ultimately respond.

“I think the city took a very long-term view with this project and really wanted to make sure we were doing more than just building a community centre in downtown New Westminster, but really contributing to a larger vision of downtown New Westminster,” he said. “The activities are starting to get busier and busier inside the Anvil Centre community component as well. I think the building is really starting to fulfil the aspirations and the vision the city had originally intended when it was built
http://www.newwestrecord.ca/news/anv...-up-1.23097041
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  #359  
Old Posted Nov 17, 2017, 5:33 PM
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Originally Posted by queetz@home View Post
Its time to laugh again!!!!


See officedweller! There is ALWAYS a market for strata office space. Not everybody is about tax strategies, room for expansions and so on. Good ole fashion "pride of ownership" and "investment opportunities" can triumph over such things anyday.
Given that it's strata, you have to wonder how much buying was done by the end user, and how much was done by those speculating.
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  #360  
Old Posted Nov 17, 2017, 5:42 PM
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Originally Posted by whatnext View Post
Given that it's strata, you have to wonder how much buying was done by the end user, and how much was done by those speculating.
definitely some speculating

I was looking for office space in North Burnaby. I found a strata unit I liked (pre-sale) however, the strata fees would be comparable to my current lease payments. I though that was just stupid and decided to extend my lease as long as possible.
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