By the end of next year 13 new shopping centres are to appear in the Czech Republic.
Overall, commercial space will be extended by up to 306,000 sq m in 2006 and 2007. There was a
total of 1,348,000 sq m of floor area in modern shopping centres in the Czech Republic at the
end of 2005.
The Czech Republic follows the European trends and will soon approach the average of the
European Union (E-25) according to the Shopping Centres Development report published by
Cushman & Wakefield, the world’s leading real estate consultancy.
“At the end of last year there were 132 sq m of shopping space per thousand population in
the Czech Republic, while the European average was 171 sq m per thousand pop. People continue
to be interested in shopping, and retailers continue to be interested in selling. The planned
development is a natural response to the market’s demands,” says Martin Žížala, head of the
retail team at Cushman & Wakefield’s Prague office.
“To date this year, the new NovoPlaza shopping centre on Novodvorská Street in Praha 4 and
the third stage of the Obchodní centrum Letňany shopping centre have been opened. Thanks to
these, the current (May 2006) Czech average is 139 sq m of modern shopping space per thousand
pop. Before the end of this year we expect the opening of the Šestka centre in Praha 6.
Refurbishment is planned for Prior in Ostrava while a new shopping centre, Mercury Centre, is
being built in České Budějovice,” says Karel Zeman, head of research at Cushman &
Wakefield.
The largest amount of shopping space in central Europe will be developed in Poland,
approximately 1,140,000 sq m in 2006 and 2007. Slovaks plan the construction of 250,000 sq m
and Hungarians 142,000 sq m.
Also western European countries, the United Kingdom, Italy, Spain and France, are planning
massive development, more than one million square metres. However, the greatest expansion is
expected in Russia, 1,860,000 sq m. Overall, shopping space in Europe will grow by more than 15
million sq m by the end of 2007.
At the end of 2005 the floor area in all European shopping centres totalled 90 million
square metres. Last year alone, 177 brand new shopping centres were built and opened, and
another 59 shopping centres were extended to include new areas. Cushman & Wakefield experts
expect that modern retail space in shopping centres in Europe will hit the mark of 100 million
square metres by the end of 2007.
Despite the considerable interest in renting retail space in Czech shopping centres, the
country’s level of rental is one of the lowest in the whole of Europe. The rental per square
metre in a 100 – 200 sq m unit in a shopping centre located outside the centre of Prague
usually amounts to €400 to 600 a year. The most expensive retail space is in the United
Kingdom, where rentals amount up to €2,500 to 2,800 per square metre a year.
“These figures are indicative only; it always depends on the situation of each particular
shopping centre, the location of the specific unit in the centre, its size, etc. Rentals in
regional shopping centres are usually lower than those in, say, large cities,” explains Martin
Žížala of C&W.
“Absolutely crucial for a shopping centre’s success is its location – a densely populated
zone with excellent accessibility by both public and private transport, with car parking
facilities. The right mix of retailers also plays an important role. Developers try to make the
offer attractive, and therefore the entertainment segment has become a common part of shopping
centres over the past few years,” notes Karel Zeman.
“The shopping centre’s success then reflects, naturally, the rental levels and retailers’
demand for leasing units. Well-established centres have long been experiencing demand for
retail space in excess of the offer. The only chance to obtain a unit is then to wait for some
of the current tenants to vacate their units, or the developer decides to extend the centre by
including additional retail space,” adds Martin Žížala.
In 2007 ten shopping centres are to open in the Czech Republic; Palladium in the centre of
Prague will be the largest of them. New construction of smaller local centres is currently
under way; they will complement the offering of large retail complexes. For example, the Most
City Centre in Most, Bondy Centrum in Mladá Boleslav, and Palace Pardubice in Pardubice,
and Galerie Fénix and Centrum Palmovka in Prague are to be completed in 2007.