Pictured: Carl Potter
The regional office occupier market has improved each quarter
this year following a sluggish start, according to a recent report
by GVA.
The Big Nine regional centres according to GVA - Birmingham,
Bristol, Cardiff, Glasgow, Manchester, Leeds, Edinburgh, Newcastle
and Liverpool, all recorded the highest quarterly take-up this
year. City and out-of-town take-up totalled 1,940,000 sq ft in Q3,
22 per cent above the quarterly average.
The Big Nine, a quarterly review of the market by the UK's
largest independent commercial property adviser, indicates slow but
continued growth in 2011 overall, yet points to a potentially more
challenging 2012.
Carl Potter, director and national head of offices, based at
GVA's Birmingham office comments: "Birmingham and Cardiff city
centres and Glasgow, Manchester and Newcastle out-of-town markets
have performed particularly well over the past quarter. The deals
in the pipeline for the rest of the year will guarantee a solid
year's activity, although renewed economic uncertainty and patchy
long term enquiries indicate a tough year ahead."
While headline rents and incentives have remained static this
year, the shortfall in new supply has seen some deals becoming more
competitive. Conversely, the glut of secondary property is causing
average rents to weaken.
Carl Potter continues: "Take-up in the nine city centres has
been spread more evenly than usual this quarter, with no
exceptional levels of take-up in any one city."
The out-of-town market took a greater proportion of activity
than usual (42 per cent), as a result of strong activity in
Glasgow.
City centre take-up totalled 1.12 million sq ft in Q3, 10 per
cent above the quarterly average. The 94,000 sq ft letting in
Liverpool at the Plaza to Weightmans Solicitors was the largest in
Q3. Availability of prime space continues to creep down in the city
centres, particularly in the core.