Ottawa’s office vacancy rate dipped slightly in the first quarter as leasing activity picked up in the Kanata tech hub and a pair of downtown properties were taken off the market with the aim of being converted to residential space. In their latest office market reports released this week, CBRE and Colliers both reported a […]
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Ottawa’s office vacancy rate dipped slightly in the first quarter as leasing activity picked up in the Kanata tech hub and a pair of downtown properties were taken off the market with the aim of being converted to residential space.
In their latest office market reports released this week, CBRE and Colliers both reported a decline in vacant office space in Ottawa in the first three months of 2024.
According to CBRE, the city’s office vacancy rate was 13 per cent in the first quarter, down from 13.3 per cent in December. Colliers pegged the vacancy rate at 12 per cent, a slight drop from 12.2 per cent in the previous quarter.
Average rent for class-A office space in downtown Ottawa was $23.29 per square foot in the first quarter, CBRE said, up slightly from $23.18 at the end of 2023.
It’s the third consecutive quarter that the city’s office vacancy rate has declined following a prolonged commercial real estate slump fuelled by the shift to remote and hybrid work during the COVID-19 crisis.
Warren Wilkinson, senior managing director of Colliers’ Ottawa office, said employers are becoming “more confident” in locking in to longer-term leases as they figure out their return-to-office plans in a post-pandemic world.
“We had a very (lengthy) period of short-term leases, and now we’re kind of back to those five-year, seven-year, 10-year leases,” he said. “That’s not everybody, but it’s enough to see the leasing velocity increase. People are more confident in making those types of decisions and committing to space.”
The Kanata submarket was a particular bright spot. The tech hub’s overall office vacancy rate fell nearly three percentage points compared with the previous quarter, dropping to 13.2 per cent.
Much of that positive absorption was driven by software firm Solace’s deal to sublease 57,000 square feet of space at 4000 Innovation Dr. from Mitel, CBRE Ottawa managing director Louis Karam explained.
“In a market like Ottawa, a few transactions can tip the scale one way or another,” Karam noted.