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  #21  
Old Posted Aug 7, 2013, 4:49 PM
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Topped off and glass is up a few floors. Seems to be the same colour as the RCMP building next door.

Fairly significant impact on the Vanier Skyline.
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  #22  
Old Posted Aug 7, 2013, 4:50 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by c_speed3108 View Post
Their last was the never ending hotel tower construction beside the Baseball stadium.
So they have something against architecture?
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  #23  
Old Posted Aug 7, 2013, 5:27 PM
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The glass is full curtain on the front, looks pretty good. Worth the 317 year wait? Maybe not, but this and the condo across the street are going to be nice additions to the Vanier skyline.
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  #24  
Old Posted Aug 31, 2013, 9:50 PM
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It's definitely topped off... as seen from the Loblaws parking lot.


Photo by me (August 31, 2013)
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  #25  
Old Posted Sep 1, 2013, 4:29 PM
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Thanks, the building looks OK. No beef against it.
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  #26  
Old Posted Sep 1, 2013, 4:53 PM
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How long has it taken to get to that point? Isn't it nearly three years since construction started?
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  #27  
Old Posted Sep 1, 2013, 5:16 PM
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How long has it taken to get to that point? Isn't it nearly three years since construction started?
It feels like 30 years. Is this the slowest construction project in Ottawa history? I think I read somewhere back in the thread that this company is notoriously slow because they self-finance.
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  #28  
Old Posted Sep 1, 2013, 7:16 PM
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Is this the slowest construction project in Ottawa history?
Not if Richcraft has something to say about it.
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  #29  
Old Posted Sep 1, 2013, 11:53 PM
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A couple more from today:




Photos by me (September 1, 2013)
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  #30  
Old Posted Oct 8, 2013, 12:00 AM
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The glass on the sides and back of the building is a different colour! It's greenish, whereas the front is a nice blue.


Photo by me. October 7, 2013.
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  #31  
Old Posted Oct 8, 2013, 12:03 AM
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This thing is taking eons to complete.
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  #32  
Old Posted Dec 2, 2013, 5:47 PM
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Mystery builds surrounding Bona’s tenantless tower in Vanier

Mark Brownlee, Published on December 02, 2013




A soon-to-be-completed but officially unleased office building in Vanier is sowing confusion among the city’s commercial real estate brokers about what’s driving the developer’s decision-making.

Bona Building and Development Co. Ltd. first raised eyebrows four years ago, when construction crews broke ground on the 10-storey structure at 140 Jeanne Mance St., just off Vanier Parkway. The building will eventually feature 273,400 square feet of office space and three levels of underground parking.

What makes BONA’s plans curious is that there is no obvious tenant to fill its new building. Ottawa’s largest tenant, the federal government, continues to downsize and shed office space, pushing up the city’s vacancy rate.

“I look at a building that’s being built in Ottawa on spec that doesn’t appear to have a tenant associated with it and in a market where there’s no private-sector growth and I think, ‘OK, what do they know that we don’t know?’” said Greg Clark, the vice-president and managing director of CBRE’s Ottawa brokerage operations.

He said his firm usually gets notices from developers indicating that new buildings about to come on the market are available for lease.

The fact that CBRE has yet to hear anything from Bona regarding the Vanier building suggests to him that the company is not interested in finding a private company to take over the space, he said.

“They certainly don’t appear to be marketing the building per se, which is what leads me to believe they’re not particularly looking for a private-sector tenant,” said Mr. Clark.

Bona isn’t willing to shed any light on its plans.

Calls to the head of the company, Robert Vocisano, were not returned. A woman who answered the phone at Bona’s offices promised to pass along an interview request but told OBJ he “kind of likes a low profile.”

The mystery surrounding Bona’s plans has left brokers wondering if a public-sector tenant is interested in taking over the space.

But if the federal government does have any intention of moving into the building any time soon, the department that handles most of its leasing is not letting on publicly.

Public Works spokesperson Annie Trépanier said the feds do not have an agreement in place to lease the space.

Nathan Smith, senior vice-president at Cushman & Wakefield Ottawa, said the building still fits with the company’s business model.

“It’s certainly not the first time Bona has built a building or done something on spec and waited for the tenants to show up,” he said. “So it’s not pioneering for them to do this.”

Others believe the space would nevertheless be ideally suited for the federal government.

Quintin Colaiacovo, a broker with CBRE, said his understanding is that Bona wants to lease the building to one or two tenants.

There aren’t that many private companies that would fit the bill, he said, so that leads him to believe the company is planning for further into the future.

“If in 12 to 16 months or 12 to 18 months the feds start growing rather than decreasing their size, then (Bona will) likely be ahead of the curve (of) people trying to apply for permits or start digging the ground,” he said. “They’ll be really fairly ready for whatever comes down the pipeline.”

Finance Minister Jim Flaherty has promised to have the federal government back in a surplus position by the 2015-16 fiscal year.

That’s creating optimism among some in the real estate community that it will once again start snapping up some vacancies in the city’s office market.

For the time being, though, the city’s creeping vacancy rate doesn’t appear ready to hit a high point any time soon.

Ottawa had a vacancy rate of 7.9 per cent during the third quarter of 2013, according to Cushman & Wakefield Ottawa’s most recent market report. That’s up from six per cent a year earlier. The report predicted that would rise even higher before the end of the year.

http://www.obj.ca/Real-Estate/Non-re...er-in-Vanier/1
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  #33  
Old Posted May 14, 2014, 5:48 PM
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Just about finished!

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  #34  
Old Posted May 14, 2014, 7:15 PM
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almost there..... [stay on target]
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  #35  
Old Posted May 14, 2014, 8:07 PM
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I like the glass on this building.
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The Fast One!
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  #36  
Old Posted May 14, 2014, 10:22 PM
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Originally Posted by Harley613 View Post
Just about finished!
Those 3 guys have really been working their butts off to complete this
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  #37  
Old Posted May 14, 2014, 10:52 PM
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Good one rocketphish!

I would have liked this curtain wall on 150 Elgin.
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  #38  
Old Posted Oct 23, 2015, 4:31 PM
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  #39  
Old Posted Oct 23, 2015, 4:32 PM
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East-end market feeling the pinch with vacancy rate more than doubling in last year

David Sali, OBJ
Published on October 21, 2015


When Mxi Technologies vacates more than 50,000 square feet of class-A office space at Blair Place in November, an east-end commercial real estate market that has already seen its vacancy rate soar from eight to more than 18 per cent over the past year will take another hit.

A rate change that drastic in the east should raise eyebrows. Far less dependent on one single business sector than Kanata and with far less commercial space than the city’s central core, Ottawa’s east-end market traditionally hasn’t experienced a lot of stomach-churning ups and downs.

But Bruce Wolfgram, a vice-president at Primecorp Commercial Realty, said the east has been trending in the wrong direction lately. Calling the area “a hidden gem,” he said the lack of an anchor industry such as the tech sector means the east end often gets overlooked when tenants go shopping for new digs.

“The bottom line is, there’s good space out there, but traditionally there just hasn’t been the willingness of some companies to consider the east,” said Mr. Wolfgram, whose firm has been trying to sublease nearly 14,000 square feet of class-A space at Morguard’s office complex at 1601 Telesat Court for more than a year with no success.

“Industries cluster in certain areas. There needs to be cluster started in the east end to get things rolling.”

Still, other commercial brokers stress that the numbers over the past 12 months, while alarming at first glance, must be put into context.

While the east’s vacancy rate is currently higher than the rates of 13 per cent in the core and just under 12 per cent in Kanata, its figure skyrocketed when Bona Building and Development Co. finished its 10-storey office tower at 140 Jeanne Mance St. near the Vanier Parkway last year.

The building, which still sits empty waiting to be leased, features nearly 275,000 square feet of class-A space – a hefty chunk of real estate in a market with about 4.6 million square feet of total inventory. When the Bona building is removed from the mix, the east’s vacancy rate dips to about nine per cent.

“I think the reality is that vacancy rate can be by and large explained by the introduction of the Bona building,” said Shawn Hamilton, vice-president and managing director at CBRE in Ottawa. “If we strip Bona out of the equation, we can see that the east end is still below Ottawa’s suburban vacancy rate, it’s below the national suburban vacancy rate. I don’t think the east end has a problem.”

Despite a flurry of speculation that the federal government will eventually move to 140 Jeanne Mance St., Public Works told OBJ last week the feds have no plans to rent space in the building any time soon.

“No discussions on office space have taken place between (Public Works) and the building owner at 140 Jeanne Mance Street,” spokesperson Jessica Kingsbury said in an e-mail. “At this time, there is no competitive process for acquisitions of space in that area.”

Bona has remained tight-lipped about its plans for the new Vanier property. Calls to the company’s president, Robert Vocisano, were not returned, but brokers told OBJ the firm has not been actively pursuing potential tenants.

Because the east end has a smaller inventory than the west or the core, moves such as Mxi’s tend to skew rates upward quite dramatically and make the situation look worse than it really is, some observers say.

The Ottawa-based software company, one of the few tech firms located east of the core, has occupied space in various buildings at Blair Place for two decades. It announced earlier this year it was moving to a single property at 175 Terence Matthews Cres. in Kanata.

“A change like an Mxi statistically will have a bigger impact than if it happens in the downtown core at 16 million square feet,” Mr. Hamilton said. “Mxi moving to the west I think is a situational thing. I don’t think that they’re leaving the east because it was horrible, they’re leaving the east because they were in a complex (where) they were fragmented and dispersed.”

He acknowledged the area is in tough trying to attract firms in growth sectors such as high tech, which tend to prefer Kanata’s “campus setting.” But he said he thinks light rail will be a “game-changer” for landlords when the Confederation Line starts carrying commuters to Blair station in 2018.

“This will in essence extend our downtown core to the east,” he said, adding he believes light rail will allow prime commercial spaces such as the Blair Park of Commerce and 1900 City Park Place to compete for tenants with buildings in the core. “People always talk about, is there going to be a migration from the core? I think if there is going to be a migration coming from the core, we would see it coming from the core to the east along the LRT. That could spur new development there.”

Not everyone is convinced. Oliver Tighe, managing director of Colliers International’s valuation and advisory services branch in Ottawa, said light rail might entice a few companies to take a second look at properties in the east, but there will be no mass influx of new tenants.

“If you have a choice, you’re likely to look downtown or at the fringe core” where access to the airport and other amenities are better, he said. “There’s not a compelling story to be in (the east end) unless you’ve traditionally located in Orleans or east Ottawa. It’s a case of, there are just better opportunities elsewhere.”

http://www.obj.ca/Real-Estate/Non-re...in-last-year/1
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  #40  
Old Posted Mar 9, 2019, 3:32 PM
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Here's an interesting tidbit about 1625 Vanier Parkway (formerly known as 140 Jeanne Mance Street):

Quote:
'It's Vanier's time': Ottawa neighbourhood set for $50M renewal project

Vito Pilieci, Ottawa Citizen
Updated: March 9, 2019


<snip>

As the federal government continues to vacate offices and move its employees outside of the downtown core, where leases are less expensive and office buildings are newer, it has recently acquired more than 110,000 square feet of space at 1625 Vanier Parkway, just South of Montreal Road. The 10-storey, 300,000 square foot building, was built on speculation. That means the landlord hadn’t leased the space prior to it being erected, which is seen as a risky move in real-estate circles. Yet the building will be home to the Canadian Centre for Cyber Security’s 750 employees.

<snip>

https://ottawacitizen.com/news/local...enewal-project
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