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  #81  
Old Posted Sep 30, 2015, 1:55 PM
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Originally Posted by bomberjet View Post
I'm all for True North Square. But how about they fill the vacancies at CentrePoint first, before getting going on more office space downtown.
What vacancies?
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  #82  
Old Posted Sep 30, 2015, 3:06 PM
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I'm all for True North Square. But how about they fill the vacancies at CentrePoint first, before getting going on more office space downtown.
Disagree... Let them build before the demand if they want. It's their money!
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  #83  
Old Posted Sep 30, 2015, 3:20 PM
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Disagree... Let them build before the demand if they want. It's their money!
That's not entirely true. The risk of not being substantially occupied falls to the city - the benefit rolls to the developer. The tax incentives are calculated out using a nominal vacancy rate to get at the property's potential taxable value to the city with those funds then being advanced to the developer (this is known as the SHED TIF). If those values don't play out, as in, if there's more vacancy, or a lower lease rate, then those funds are rebated by the developer. The city only collects the taxes the building actually generates and then has to close the gap between the subsidy and the actual value. Sort of like what's happening at Centrepoint right now given their large vacancy rate.

The only somewhat mitigating factor - if you can call it that - is that the Province has kicked in a large sum of money to finance the SHED TIF. But I might call that cold comfort.
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  #84  
Old Posted Sep 30, 2015, 5:37 PM
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There's 2 floors out of 5 that have yet to be leased. Of course I'd love to see TNS go ahead from a fancy building perspective!
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  #85  
Old Posted Sep 30, 2015, 9:05 PM
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Originally Posted by bomberjet View Post
I'm all for True North Square. But how about they fill the vacancies at CentrePoint first, before getting going on more office space downtown.
Only 1.5 floors of office space are left, everything else is taken so that's really not that bad. Especially since they're not crazy big floor plates. They were probably holding out to see if someone would take it all, but they probably won't have a problem filling it if they divide it a bit.
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  #86  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2015, 12:38 PM
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today's freepress ""We're dealing with six serious parties," Scott Stephanson said in an interview Wednesday ",

The 19-storey tower will be about 300,000 square feet and will include a 14-storey tower on top of a five-storey podium. The retail tenants, one of which could be a grocery store, will be on the bottom two floors, Stephanson said, and the rest of the building is expected to be office space.

The nine-storey tower on the former Carlton Inn site will be about 270,000 square feet, and most of that is also expected to be office space.

The third tower -- a hotel/condominium complex to be built at the south end of the MPI property -- will include a main-floor lobby area, 21 floors of hotel rooms and six floors of condos.

Stephanson said True North is negotiating with an experienced hotel developer that would build and manage the hotel.
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  #87  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2015, 1:43 PM
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Sounds pretty sweet. Lots of office space to be filled though.
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  #88  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2015, 2:25 PM
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Downtown Winnipeg has ~8.5MM square feet of office space. Of the 8 major centres in Canada, it has the lowest average rents (lower than Halifax!). As of Q2 of this year net absorption was negative ~33k square feet and that the ~81k square feet of Centrepoint that hit the market this year. Vacancy is at 11% and climbing.

Naturally, we move the market by ~6% and add 500K of subsidized office square footage.
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  #89  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2015, 2:44 PM
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A 19-story tower would be similar in height to the Carlton Square properties. The 28 floor hotel/condo would be similar in height to the Portage and Main corner. I thought the Carlton Inn site would have a bigger residential component. The addition of all that office space without any real new demand seems to suggest it is either going to site vacant or other vacancies are going to being popping up. Perhaps there will be a wave of medical professionals looking for new downtown office space...
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  #90  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2015, 3:30 PM
lilwayne lilwayne is offline
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Originally Posted by CoryB View Post
A 19-story tower would be similar in height to the Carlton Square properties. The 28 floor hotel/condo would be similar in height to the Portage and Main corner. I thought the Carlton Inn site would have a bigger residential component. The addition of all that office space without any real new demand seems to suggest it is either going to site vacant or other vacancies are going to being popping up. Perhaps there will be a wave of medical professionals looking for new downtown office space...
they did state that they have 6 major parties involved right?

they are involved in serious and advanced talks with atleast 6 companies right now retail and office plus they already have a hoteller.. soo I mean come on dude if 4 out of the 6 parites are demanding office space there is demand... but ya I mean 2 towers of that height would be amaazzzingggg.. our skyline would be significantly different than it is now.... especially if sky city and this go through that would be 6 massive bldgs. around mts center in a 6 year period... mb hydro bldg., alt hotel, glasshouse, so po square hotel, so po square office condo and sky city\


do people here stop reading artcles


he 6 office tenants STILL IN ADVANCED TALKS TO TAKE UP SPACE AT THE SQUARE
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  #91  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2015, 3:44 PM
lilwayne lilwayne is offline
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and the way politics work here and as much influence as chipman has on the city I am hundred percent sure they conferred with him before making any decision. I'm sure he gave the go ahead to choose that location because he knew that it was important to revitalize that part of graham.. it would only increase the value of his properties if something decent is added to or built on that ugly surface lot around medical arts bldg... who else would be interested on building there other than a crown corp...
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  #92  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2015, 3:58 PM
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Originally Posted by lilwayne View Post
they did state that they have 6 major parties involved right?

they are involved in serious and advanced talks with atleast 6 companies right now retail and office plus they already have a hoteller.. soo I mean come on dude if 4 out of the 6 parites are demanding office space there is demand... but ya I mean 2 towers of that height would be amaazzzingggg.. our skyline would be significantly different than it is now.... especially if sky city and this go through that would be 6 massive bldgs. around mts center in a 6 year period... mb hydro bldg., alt hotel, glasshouse, so po square hotel, so po square office condo and sky city\


do people here stop reading artcles


he 6 office tenants STILL IN ADVANCED TALKS TO TAKE UP SPACE AT THE SQUARE
I'm sure you're like 12 so I'm not going to bother with this too much, but as a rule going forward in life, don't believe everything you read. Do your own critical thinking. All 6 of those tenants - whether they exist or not (and I'm betting maybe half of them actually do) - will be moving from one building to another.

If somebody lets the lease expire on an existing space and takes up in a new one, they aren't creating any increased aggregate demand. they're actually creating less relative demand and you're helping to drive down the aggregate value of rents. The rest of the story is over your head so I'll stop there.
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  #93  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2015, 4:03 PM
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Originally Posted by Simplicity View Post
If somebody lets the lease expire on an existing space and takes up in a new one, they aren't creating any increased aggregate demand. they're actually creating less relative demand and you're helping to drive down the aggregate value of rents. The rest of the story is over your head so I'll stop there.
Exactly. It's the same as how the government (especially in MB) LOVES to talk about "jobs created" when the majority of them are just people leaving/finishing other jobs to take them. Not actually NEW jobs or added value, just new job vacancies.
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  #94  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2015, 4:14 PM
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If those companies are moving from the burbs, I have no problem with that. The engineering ghettos of southwest Winnipeg for example. Thousands of smart, well paid individuals, driving their cars from one end of town to the other. Move that shit downtown already.
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  #95  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2015, 4:18 PM
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Originally Posted by buzzg View Post
Exactly. It's the same as how the government (especially in MB) LOVES to talk about "jobs created" when the majority of them are just people leaving/finishing other jobs to take them. Not actually NEW jobs or added value, just new job vacancies.
And then just imagine if two employers were competing in a tight market for labour. One party would be a long-standing employer paying market wages and supplying the employees with standard market tools. The other party would be a new-to-market employer subsidized by the government for no good reason to pay both market wages and provide the most technologically advanced equipment in the field that made the jobs of the employees safer, more productive, and more enjoyable.

If we heard this sort of thing coming from China, we'd have a good laugh about the communist ruling class picking winners and losers.
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  #96  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2015, 4:21 PM
Simplicity Simplicity is offline
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Originally Posted by bomberjet View Post
If those companies are moving from the burbs, I have no problem with that. The engineering ghettos of southwest Winnipeg for example. Thousands of smart, well paid individuals, driving their cars from one end of town to the other. Move that shit downtown already.
You know what had net positive absorption over the last year? Suburban office space. These engineering firms are catering to their clientele.
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  #97  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2015, 4:27 PM
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Originally Posted by buzzg View Post
Exactly. It's the same as how the government (especially in MB) LOVES to talk about "jobs created" when the majority of them are just people leaving/finishing other jobs to take them. Not actually NEW jobs or added value, just new job vacancies.
Just so. I was doing programming for a company in the early '90s when the Filmon government announced with great fanfare that it was giving our direct competitor three quarters of a million dollars to open a call center and create lots of jobs.

Of course the company merely closed down its existing call center and moved it.
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  #98  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2015, 4:40 PM
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Originally Posted by Simplicity View Post
You know what had net positive absorption over the last year? Suburban office space. These engineering firms are catering to their clientele.
I recently changed companies and am now located downtown. Moved from the south end ghettos. It's quite convenient to walk 10 mins to meet with clients. In winter the skywalk is also convenient.

It's a hastle to now have to schedule my car trips. "Okay tomorrow I have a meeting I need to drive to. Make sure GF doesn't need the car, so I can take it with me. Make sure to expense my $10 parking fees. Drive to never never land for the meeting. Etc."

I find it's a battle between management and employees. Not to envoke a blanket statement on all people. But I find older, wealthier management are more likely to prefer suburban locations. My GF's company is relocating to south Pembina office space. She would prefer downtown, as would about 75% of the staff. It's the older, management folk who live in that area and want to drive to work that ruin it for the rest of them.

Anecdotal, but ts generally true from my experiences. Same goes for the old company I worked for. They chose to relocate a few years back to the south end because the managers lived in Lindenwoods and White Ridge.
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  #99  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2015, 4:50 PM
Simplicity Simplicity is offline
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Originally Posted by bomberjet View Post
I recently changed companies and am now located downtown. Moved from the south end ghettos. It's quite convenient to walk 10 mins to meet with clients. In winter the skywalk is also convenient.

It's a hastle to now have to schedule my car trips. "Okay tomorrow I have a meeting I need to drive to. Make sure GF doesn't need the car, so I can take it with me. Make sure to expense my $10 parking fees. Drive to never never land for the meeting. Etc."

I find it's a battle between management and employees. Not to envoke a blanket statement on all people. But I find older, wealthier management are more likely to prefer suburban locations. My GF's company is relocating to south Pembina office space. She would prefer downtown, as would about 75% of the staff. It's the older, management folk who live in that area and want to drive to work that ruin it for the rest of them.

Anecdotal, but ts generally true from my experiences. Same goes for the old company I worked for. They chose to relocate a few years back to the south end because the managers lived in Lindenwoods and White Ridge.
There's no question about that. But it's also the clientele. Decision makers are generally older, more affluent people living in these areas too. The whole thing is an exercise in trying to relate.

And I think it depends on what sort of engineering you're doing. You're involved int he transportation side if i remember correctly, so a lot of your 'clients' (read: government) will already be downtown too. But if you're a basic structural guy or doing electrical or mechanical stuff for contractors, your clients are largely transient and prefer not to have to pay to park their huge trucks downtown while they come in to pick up drawings. But of course, this is also anecdotal.

Eventually it isn't going to matter much anyway. Clients rarely see the inside of an office anymore given the ease with which things are emailed or meetings that can held over the phone or skype, and you're right about how the decisions are made: the owners/partners settle where its convenient. That'll likely continue to be the suburbs given that the decision makers will generally always be on the older side.
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  #100  
Old Posted Oct 1, 2015, 4:52 PM
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great thread and then along comes the resident dickhead to condescend to everyone.

Sorry for the interruption. That is all.
Good comment. I get that it's a little beyond you, but be sure to stick around for when the conversation turns to pouring drinks or where you'd prefer the next Wendy's location. We'll need your insight.
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