Birmingham tops Regional Office Enquiries League

Posted on 8 September, 2015 by Cliff Goodwin

Birmingham has more active enquires for Grade A office space than any other regional city in the UK, claims a Knight Frank quarterly report.

Knight Frank

According to the property consultancy’s Regional Offices Occupier and Investment Market report for the second quarter of 2015, the West Midlands city accounts for 945,000 sq ft out of 4.4m sq ft of office space enquiries across ten regional cities. The other cities were: Aberdeen, Bristol, Cardiff, Edinburgh, Glasgow, Leeds, Manchester, Newcastle and Sheffield.

“It is a great credit to Birmingham that more than 20 per cent of regional office enquires are focused on the city,” commented Jamie Phillips (pictured), a partner and head of the office team at Knight Frank’s Birmingham office. “The city is proving a great draw not just to traditional indigenous occupiers, but to inward investors too.”

He said there were concerns, however, about Birmingham’s ability to satisfy this demand. Take up in the city between April and June was higher than in any other regional centre, with more than 520,000 sq ft transacted — a fourfold rise on this year’s first quarter.

“Whilst take up has been fantastic, the bad news is that it has left Birmingham with the lowest levels of Grade A stock outside London,” added Phillips. “We currently have just one year’s supply. What’s more, half of this is not even currently available, it’s still under construction.”

It will be more than two years before high profile new build schemes such as 103 Colmore Row, Arena Central and Paradise start delivering new space to the market. In the meantime, the focus will be on refurbishment schemes, including One Colmore Square, 55 Colmore Row and Two Cornwall Street.

As well as encouraging refurbishment, the lettings boom is driving rental growth. “Rents are currently £30 per sq ft, but they are anticipated to rise to £31 per sq ft by the end of this year,” he said. “And by the end of 2016 we are predicting prime rents in Birmingham will be £33.50, finally breaching their pre-recession high.”

The prospect of long overdue rent rises has also fired the gun on speculative development in the city. According to the Knight Frank report, some 900,000 sq ft of new space is forecast to be delivered by 2018, much of it speculative.

“The letting of 46,000 sq ft of space to Birmingham City University ahead of completion at phase one of Eastside Locks is an early indication of the appetite for new build space,” Phillips said.

The biggest speculative single office scheme is Sterling Property Ventures’ and Rockspring’s 103 Colmore Row, where work dismantling the mothballed NatWest Tower has already started.

Manchester boasted the second highest take-up outside London, recording just shy of 400,000 sq ft of office premises removed from the market.




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