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Ranking 2005 |
City |
% of total legal take-up 2005 |
Take-up 2005 (sq m) |
Take-up 2004(sq m) |
|
1 |
London |
28 |
68,000 |
110,800 |
|
2 |
Paris |
18 |
43,300 |
17,100 |
|
3 |
Frankfurt |
16 |
38,000 |
43,700 |
|
4 |
Brussels |
9 |
21,100 |
18,900 |
|
5 |
Amsterdam |
8 |
19,300 |
27,000 |
|
6 |
Warsaw |
|
11,300 |
3,900 |
|
7 |
Barcelona |
|
7,100 |
10,500 |
|
8 |
Milan |
|
6,500 |
7,000 |
|
9 |
Edinburgh |
|
5,500 |
14,200 |
|
10 |
Budapest |
|
4,900 |
3,800 |
|
11 |
Glasgow |
|
3,600 |
1,000 |
|
12 |
Madrid |
|
3,400 |
12,700 |
|
13 |
Prague |
|
2,800 |
1,600 |
|
14 |
Lisbon |
|
800 |
4,800 |
|
15 |
Rome |
|
0 |
1,600 |
|
|
Other |
21 |
|
|
|
TOTALS |
|
|
235,000 |
279,000 |
Source: Cushman & Wakefield
The Top Five Cities for Legal Firms
In London, the level of take-up was almost 40 per cent down on 2004 with the market perceived as having peaked. “The general consensus is that the legal market has peaked, with mor companies concentrating on consolidation and cost-saving measures. However, take-up levels may well increase in the short to medium term as companies anticipate to relocate,” says Mark Pollitt, based in Cushman & Wakefield’s City office.
Geoffroy Doudrich, Head of Cushman & Wakefield’s Legal Group in France, explains the strong increase in take-up in Paris: “The demand is coming from US law firms looking to expand in France, as well as the continued increase in corporate activity, and in particular the privatisation of the French energy sector with the subsequent M&A activity.”
US firms are also expanding in Frankfurt, where demand was down 13 per cent last year. Most notably, for example, Sanders Squire was able to benefit from the break-up of German law firm Haarmann Hemmelrath in order to expand in the German market.
In Brussels, where activity was up 12 per cent, demand is being driven by changes to EU trading law and M&A activity, both Belgian and European.
However, in Amsterdam, demand was down by almost 30 per cent. “Although international players do not dominate the legal sector, they have, generally, shown more rapid growth,” says Cushman & Wakefield’s report.|
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