EN
| FR
|
|
Rank 2010 |
Rank 2011 |
City, Location |
Country |
Occupancy Cost €/sq.m./year |
Occupancy Cost $/sq.ft/year |
|
3 |
1 |
Hong Kong CBD |
China |
1,931 |
241 |
|
2 |
2 |
London West End |
UK |
1,872 |
233 |
|
3 |
Tokyo CBD |
Japan |
1,334 |
166 |
|
|
13 |
4 |
Rio de Janeiro CBD |
Brazil |
965 |
120 |
|
6 |
5 |
New York Midtown |
USA |
920 |
115 |
|
5 |
6 |
Mumbai CBD |
India |
916 |
114 |
|
7 |
7 |
Moscow CBD |
Russia |
868 |
108 |
|
8 |
8 |
Paris CBD |
France |
835 |
104 |
|
10 |
9 |
Zurich CBD |
Switzerland |
786 |
98 |
|
9 |
10 |
Milan CBD |
Italy |
729 |
91 |
Mariana Mokayad Hanania, Manager - Research Services, Cushman & Wakefield South America, said: “The rise of rents in Rio de Janeiro’s office market results from very high demand and a lack of supply in the city. The quality of the new stock being delivered is speeding up rental growth.”
The USA overall saw a slight decline of 2% over the year with occupier sentiment remaining largely subdued in most cities. However, rents in the prime midtown New York submarket jumped by 10% as the city emerged from recession faster than the rest of the country.
Rental levels in Hong Kong soared by 51% in 2010, driven by strong demand on the back of a rising number of corporate expansions and new businesses and limited availability of grade A office space. It was a similar situation in the Beijing office market where a surge in rental rates was underpinned by the lowest vacancy rate in the last decade. In contrast to the prevailing regional trend, rents in Tokyo fell by 11% though it kept its position as the third most expensive location in the world. The city remained a tenant’s market with vacancy rates rising and average rents decreasing.
Barrie David of the Cushman & Wakefield Research Group said, “We are now seeing the sustained presence of Asian locations in the upper reaches of our ranking. Tokyo and Hong Kong are now firmly established as some of the most expensive office locations globally, and three of our top six locations in our ranking are from the Asia region.This is in contrast to 10-15 years ago, where the most expensive cities were generally found in Western Europe and North America, and highlights the recent growth and development within an increasing number of Asian markets over the last few years.”
In Europe, the picture was largely stable with a slight rental increase of 1%, though there were specific locations of notable growth. These included London, where there was a 25% uplift in rents in the City sub-market and a 27% rise in the West End, Milan (10% uplift) and Paris (9% increase).
James Meikle, Head of Office Space Milan, Cushman & Wakefield Italy, said: “Milan's historical CBD has witnessed a 10% rental growth over the last 12 months, almost returning to the peak levels seen in early 2008. This growth has been driven by an increase in demand - mainly from banks rationalising their front office requirements as well as growth in the legal sector - and the scarcity of newly refurbished grade A office space that is currently available.”
|
|