The National Capital Region is still playing catchup on industrial real estate construction even as another mega-warehouse is in the works in Barrhaven, a prominent commercial broker says. “Ottawa has been deprived of industrial development for the last 40 years,” Steve Piercey, a vice-president at CBRE’s local office who specializes in leasing industrial properties, told […]
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The National Capital Region is still playing catchup on industrial real estate construction even as another mega-warehouse is in the works in Barrhaven, a prominent commercial broker says.
“Ottawa has been deprived of industrial development for the last 40 years,” Steve Piercey, a vice-president at CBRE’s local office who specializes in leasing industrial properties, told OBJ in a recent interview. “I think we’re just catching up to every other major city.”
Piercey was reacting to Montreal-based construction firm Broccolini’s recently filed plans to build a 3.1-million-square-foot fulfilment centre near the intersection of Woodroffe Avenue and Fallowfield Road in east Barrhaven.
The proposed facility would be the largest industrial building in Ottawa once it is completed. It would be Broccolini’s third warehouse build in Ottawa, following a 2.8-million-square-foot facility at 222 Citigate Dr. that opened in 2021 and a one-million-square-foot distribution centre on Boundary Road that was completed in 2019.
But even with the spate of big-bay builds in recent years, Piercey says Ottawa’s total industrial footprint – which ranges from about 38 million square feet to 46 million square feet, depending on the source – continues to lag other similar-sized Canadian cities.
According to CBRE’s third-quarter industrial real estate report, for example, Calgary and Edmonton both have about 160 million square feet of industrial property, while Winnipeg has about 88 million square feet.
The lack of inventory is reflected in Ottawa’s vacancy rate, which is the second-lowest in the country at 1.5 per cent, just behind London, Ont., at 1.3 per cent.
Meanwhile, leasing costs in the National Capital Region have been climbing steadily over the past several years as supply – particularly for users that need much smaller pockets of space than facilities such as Broccolini’s warehouse provide – remains scarce.
Asking net rents in Ottawa have risen from just over $12 a square foot in 2021 to nearly $16 in the third quarter of this year.
And with only about half a million square feet of new construction underway, the space crunch won’t ease up any time soon, Piercey said.
“We’re having tenants renew in place at (rental) rates they’re not happy with because we cannot find them alternative locations,” he said. “Rates are still increasing, vacancy is getting tighter.
“We’re still half of what a typical city with our population size has in terms of industrial square footage. It’s got to catch up at some point, and projects like (Broccolini’s latest proposal) are an indication of what the city really needs. I’m excited to see groups look at Ottawa from this perspective, and I really hope it continues. We have consistent requests for space in Ottawa that we can’t solve today, so groups like this are going out there and having to build it themselves.”
Broccolini, whose other industrial facilities in Ottawa are both leased to Amazon, has not publicly stated if it already has tenants lined up to occupy its proposed warehouse. James Beach, the company’s Ottawa-based vice-president of real estate development, was unavailable for comment on Monday.