Vancouver, Calgary, Toronto, Ottawa and Montreal record lowest vacancies
amongst largest North American cities
Canada’s five largest cities have posted the lowest vacancy rates in the first quarter
of 2008 outranking the 10 largest central and suburban office leasing markets in North
America.
Vancouver, Toronto and Montreal have seen vacancy trend down through 2007, while Ottawa and
Calgary have trended up.
The sharpest drop in vacancy was seen in central Montreal, where the year-over-year rate
dropped 3.5 percentage points to 5.8% on strong absorption and a lack of new supply, narrowly
bumping Midtown Manhattan from the top five with its 6% vacancy rate in the first quarter.
“Montreal has experienced years of virtual stagnation in the office leasing
market,” said Colum Bastable, President and Chief Executive Officer, Cushman &
Wakefield LePage. “But slow and steady economic growth and a lack of new development over
the past decade have transitioned Montreal from a tenant market to a landlord
market.”
Calgary saw the sharpest rise in vacancy, from a low of 1.4% in the first quarter of 2007 to
4.5% in the opening quarter of 2008, providing some much needed relief in that overheated
market. However, Class A downtown space continues to be scarce, with just 1.8% vacant –
up slightly from a year ago when vacancy registered at 0.6%.
Toronto’s vacancy rates continue to trend downward in all submarkets – and all
building classes – dropping from 6.6% in the first quarter last year, to 5.6% this
quarter. The suburban market (all building classes) has the lowest vacancy of the largest North
American cities, at just 7.2%.
“Despite a cooling provincial economy, Toronto continues to show strong demand and
should expect continued tightening of the market before any significant new supply comes
online,” said Bastable. “Over 70% of space in the three new downtown office towers
has now been booked, and we’re seeing a sense of urgency from tenants trying to find
suitable space.”
Toronto’s suburban markets have seen strong development activity – including
speculative development – and even stronger absorption figures.
“All of Canada’s major markets are well positioned to weather an economic
downturn,” said Bastable. “Years of conservative and prudent development, along
with low interest rates, will work to keep supply and demand in relative equilibrium –
even as the economy and demand slacken.”
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Cushman & Wakefield LePage is the Canadian operation of Cushman & Wakefield,
the world's largest privately-held commercial real estate services firm. Founded in 1917, it
has 221 offices in 58 countries and more than 15,000 employees. The firm represents a
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the firm publishes a broad array of proprietary reports available on its online Knowledge
Center at www.cushmanwakefield.com.