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  #101  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2020, 1:11 AM
kevinbottawa kevinbottawa is offline
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RoseFellow to build 3 Montreal, Ottawa-area industrial sites


In Casselman, RoseFellow and JV partner Bertone – which owns the vacant 931,395-square-foot site off Highway 417 and St-Albert Road – plan to invest $60 million to build either a 560,000-square-foot distribution centre or three 130,000-square-foot buildings for multiple tenants. Construction is scheduled to start in the spring or summer of 2021.

Casselman, about 55 kilometres from downtown Ottawa, is off the main highway linking the nation’s capital and Montreal. The area between the two cities is in high demand from all types of industrial users, Tsoumas says.

“There’s a significant interest and demand from clients who are not interested or looking to build in the province (of Quebec) but want to stay close to the ‘invisible border’ (between Quebec and Ontario),” Jager says.

“We’ve received requests from e-commerce-type clients who have asked us if we have properties in Ontario, so we started our search and created the JV with the Bertone Group.”

Buildings at all three sites will have a similar concrete look RoseFellow plans to use for all of its future industrial projects.

“You’ll be able to notice what is a RoseFellow building. It’s something we’ve spent a lot of time working on,” Jager says.
https://renx.ca/rosefellow-to-build-...ustrial-sites/
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  #102  
Old Posted Aug 19, 2020, 3:50 AM
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Is that the vacant site at the north side of the Limoges interchange?
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  #103  
Old Posted Sep 30, 2020, 12:40 PM
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Ottawa's office vacancy rate jumps to 8% in Q3

September 29, OBJ

Ottawa’s office vacancy rate rose nearly a full percentage point in the third quarter as the COVID-19-fuelled economic slump prompted more tenants to shed space or take a wait-and-see approach to jumping into the market, real estate firm CBRE says.

The overall office vacancy rate in the capital was eight per cent for the three-month period from July to September, the company said its third-quarter report on the Canadian office market. That’s up from 7.2 per cent in Q2, marking the third consecutive quarter that the vacancy rate in Ottawa has risen.

The vacancy rate for class-A space in the downtown core jumped 150 basis points to six per cent ​– a dramatic increase fuelled largely by Shopify’s move to get rid of 170,000 square feet of real estate at its former headquarters on Elgin Street.

Fellow downtown tech firm OpenText also returned 20,000 square feet to the market last quarter, helping push the overall amount of office space available for sublet in Ottawa to more than 530,000 square feet – nearly double the total from the previous quarter.

CBRE Ottawa managing director Shawn Hamilton said he’s not surprised a growing number of business tenants are looking to ditch pricey digs as they brace for more economic uncertainty.

Not in the 'red zone'

Still, he said the local market still has a long way to go before it sees sublease activity at levels approaching the Great Recession of 2008, when a million square feet of space was put back on the market, or the dot-com burst of 2003 when 2.5 million square feet of space was available to sublet.

“Although this is a trend that is growing, we’re still not what I would call in the red zone,” Hamilton said. “Will it go there? That’s what we’re watching (for). Right now, we’re not hearing of wholesale (office real estate) cutbacks across the board.”

Sublet space now represents nearly one-fifth of all vacant real estate in the downtown office market. Hamilton noted that when the city’s largest office tenant, the federal government, shed a hefty chunk of space in the core back in 2008, Ottawa’s new generation of growing tech enterprises were in growth mode and helped stabilize the market.

This time around, he explained, it’s the Shopifys that are downsizing, and there’s no obvious crop of tenants in other sectors to replace them. The federal government, which is also rethinking its traditional office footprint, is unlikely to lease the space, Hamilton added.

“To me, this sort of shows that the downtown is starting to behave a little more like the private-sector market than it has traditionally,” he said.

While business tenants generally make for a “more vibrant downtown core in good times,” Hamilton said, “the corollary of that is when things are soft, we might feel it a little more.”

In the long run, he thinks Ottawa will bounce back. The capital’s relative affordability and high quality of life could make it a “more attractive” destination for private-sector tenants looking to leave markets such as Toronto and Montreal for cheaper space elsewhere, Hamilton said.

“Once this is all said and done … I think Ottawa could look pretty good,” he said.

On the industrial front, the city’s availability rate jumped a full percentage point to 4.3 per cent in the third quarter as space at an industrial site on Bantree Street was put on the market and a new development opened on Ages Drive.

Hamilton said the city’s aging stock of industrial properties needs to be “modernized” to attract new tenants. But he also believes Ottawa’s industrial sector is poised for a renaissance as more e-commerce retailers consider the city as a potential site for new fulfilment centres, thanks to its prime location between Toronto and Montreal.

Pointing to Amazon’s new 2.8-million-square-foot warehouse that’s now under construction in Barrhaven, Hamilton said he thinks the region will be “the benefactor of more Amazon-type facilities” in the near future.

“I see industrial being a growth industry for Ottawa,” he said.
https://obj.ca/index.php/article/rea...ate-jumps-8-q3
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  #104  
Old Posted Oct 2, 2020, 10:12 PM
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Pandemic could spark shift to suburban offices, Ottawa workplace expert says

By: David Sali, OBJ
Published: Oct 2, 2020 4:39pm EDT


The COVID-19 pandemic could trigger a shift toward smaller, suburban office spaces as more people seek to work in less crowded settings closer to home, a local expert on workplace management says.

“What employees are looking for is flexibility,” Thatcher Workplace Consulting president Meredith Thatcher said Thursday night during an online discussion hosted by the Ottawa chapter of Financial Executives International Canada.

The pandemic has forced employers to rethink their concept of the workplace as meetings have shifted to video-conferencing platforms such as Zoom and traditional face-to-face brainstorming sessions have been replaced by remote meetings, Thatcher noted.

The most successful companies have adapted to the new reality of remote work, she added, coming up with creative new ways of bringing employees together via new technology.

Office life isn’t for everyone, Thatcher said. Employees should give their staff the freedom to work wherever they’re most productive, whether it’s their living rooms, a co-working space or even a branch location that doesn’t require them to commute all the way downtown, she explained.

“Let’s continue some of that experimentation,” Thatcher said, suggesting a “hub-and-spoke” model with satellite offices in places such as Orléans and Barrhaven could foster a more creative culture by allowing different groups of employees who don’t normally associate at work to come together and exchange new ideas.

“It all depends on what's important to you,” she said, noting there’s no one-size-fits-all approach to reimagining work life in a post-COVID world. “I don’t care if I ever have an office again.”

Commercial real estate broker Alan Doak, the evening’s other main panellist, said the hub-and-spoke idea is becoming a hot topic of discussion as tenants try to figure out new ways to safely integrate employees back into the workplace.

But he said that while there’s a lot of talk about the concept, it isn’t a viable option for many employers.

“Running satellite offices is not a simple thing to do,” explained Doak, a principal at Proveras Commercial Realty. Even if it did allow employers to reduce their footprints in pricey downtown office towers, he said, they would need to hire extra staff to run the outlying locations and incur new leasing and upkeep expenses at those spaces.

“I’m not certain that the return on that investment is necessarily there,” he said.

Although Ottawa’s office vacancy rate rose near a full percentage point in the third quarter as the pandemic continued to batter the local economy, Doak said he believes the commercial real estate industry will weather the storm.

“Long term, I think we’re going to do just fine,” he said.

https://www.obj.ca/index.php/article...tawa-workplace
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  #105  
Old Posted Dec 2, 2020, 6:06 PM
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City Centre tenants given 2 weeks to move out
Ottawa Tool Library among tenants forced to find new digs on short notice

Amanda Pfeffer · CBC News
Posted: Dec 01, 2020 2:15 PM ET | Last Updated: December 1




The Ottawa Tool Library and several other tenants under sublease to Makerspace North at Ottawa's City Centre have less than two weeks to find new homes.

City Centre's landlord posted notices on the tenants' doors on Thursday giving them just 14 days to vacate.

"We had no inkling this was coming. Zero," said Bettina Vollmerhausen, founder of the non-profit Ottawa Tool Library (OTL), one of the subtenants being evicted.

Makerspace North was founded in 2015 as "a community hub and startup incubator." According to the non-profit's website, the 20,000-square-foot space has been home to some 100 subtenants, from woodworking shops to product developers.

Vollmerhausen said OTL has been vigilantly paying rent to Makerspace, and has asked the landlord through its management company District Realty if it could remain at City Centre. OTL, which has called the space home for six years, was told no, nor are any subtenants being allowed to store equipment at City Centre while they look for new digs.

"And so we now have to pack everything up," Vollmerhausen said Monday.

District Realty's representative responsible for City Centre, Michael Morin, did not return calls from CBC.

According to the notice to vacate, Makerspace and its founder John Criswick "are in long-standing and significant rental arrears under the lease and, despite numerous demands, have failed to put the lease into good standing."

The notice said the ownership group, Development Corporation, Fourth Generation Realty Corporation and Freedom Holdings Inc., intends to "exercise its rights and remedies" under the lease and the law, "including the right to retake possession of the Premises."

But Criswick said the eviction came as a surprise, and he's looking for answers.

"I still haven't heard back from them," he told CBC. "I've called a few times. I'm trying to understand where they stand."

Criswick said Makerspace was doing well before the pandemic. He said the non-profit had let some tenants out of their subleases, but the space started filling up again this fall.

Criswick said he spent a $40,000 interest-free loan he obtained through the Canada Emergency Business Account (CEBA) program to pay down his own rent, and was counting on the recently passed Canada Emergency Rent Subsidy to fill in the remaining gaps.

It's not only Makerspace's subtenants that are being given the boot: furniture store Mikaza's lease was supposed to end at the end of the month, but owner Haig Khatchadourian said he'd been in negotiations for a month-to-month extension until he could move in the spring.

Instead, Mikaza said he received a notice giving him 30 days to get out.

"There's no physical way of emptying this space in one month because we can't find a location that would rent to us for just two months," said Khatchadourian, who's now scrambling to find temporary storage space.

Other City Centre tenants said they've been assured they're not being evicted.

Meanwhile, OTL is asking anyone who may have a lead on a space, whether for temporary storage or a permanent home, to reach out.

"I don't know if we're going to find a new location by Dec. 9, but we're really hoping someone in town may know a space," Vollmerhausen said.

"We attract a lot of people, we're an amazing organization," she said. "We are a vibrant member of this community."

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottaw...-out-1.5823229
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  #106  
Old Posted Jan 14, 2021, 1:41 PM
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Originally Posted by Acajack View Post
Wow, 5 million dollars is a steal for that building. It's only 10 times the price of my house and it's much larger in a prime location in the main nightlife and tourist district of the capital of the country.

Good for him, though. A city needs entrepreneurs like that to make things happen.
Actually, I'd say $5 mil is pretty close to what it's worth. In Ottawa, we're used to gang busters real-estate prices brought on by high demand and ridiculous bidding wars but, those are largely based on speculation. The little $800,000 brick bungalow in Overbrook will likely be replaced by a cheap 12 unit condo building where each unit will go for nearly the same price as the original house. The century+ old brick walk-up in Centretown will be demolished to make way for a 27 storey tower. The collection of commercial buildings and parking lots in Hintonburg? Well, it was just re-zoned from 6 to 9 floors last year, but we'll try our luck with a 23 storey proposal and probably get it, so why not pay double the value?

In the Byward Market, buildings have honest to God heritage protection. You can't add any floor space, you can't modify the exterior, you can't let it rot until demo by neglect (which is tolerated anywhere else in the city), and even if you did, you won't be able to build anything much larger. What you see is what you get. You must work within the existing building envelope. So what we have here is a building sold for it's true value because there is no potential for re-development, and that's refreshing to see.

This is why I think Ottawa needs to straighten it's zoning rules. Work a few years re-zoning the entire city (based on square footage more than height to allow some innovation and height variations) and do not accept any proposal larger than what is allowed, with a few exceptions. That way, things will be sold for their true value, not for the expectation that the City will approve anything as long as you contributed to the Mayor's re-election campaign.
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  #107  
Old Posted Feb 7, 2021, 1:56 PM
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Random question: are the Westeinde's twins?

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Ottawa's Windmill Development Group partners with T.O. firm on $100M green real estate fund

David Sali, OBJ
Feb. 5 2021



[*]Windmill Development Group co-founder Jonathan Westeinde is helping launch a new real estate fund aimed at financing environmentally friendly projects. File photo


A pioneer of green real estate in the capital has teamed up with a Toronto investment firm to create a new fund aimed at developing environmentally friendly projects in both cities that deliver social benefits and solid financial returns.

Ottawa-based Windmill Development Group ​– one of the original companies behind the $1.5-billion Zibi mixed-use waterfront community on Albert and Chaudière islands ​– has banded together with southern Ontario’s Epic Investment Services to form the One Planet Living Real Estate Fund, the two firms said this week.

Two years in the making, the fund is quickly approaching its goal of hitting $100 million in its first go-round, Windmill co-founder and chief executive Jonathan Westeinde told OBJ on Friday. The first phase of the fund is expected to close by the end of March.

“Investors’ appetites in general are getting more (environmentally and socially) focused,” Westeinde said. “We’re really looking at growing this as a platform we can take throughout North America.”

Founded in 2003, Windmill has been a longtime advocate of green building principles at developments such as Zibi and The Plant, an urban agricultural-themed condo and townhome project in Toronto.

Private foundations

The company has tapped into a wide network of investors, including the Atmospheric Fund, a Toronto-based non-profit group that helps finance projects aimed at reducing greenhouse gases. Westeinde said other private foundations as well as a major U.S. “profit-driven organization” are also contributing to the fund, which is aiming to deliver an initial net rate of return of 18 per cent to its investors.

Westeinde, who was on the founding board of the Canada Green Building Council 18 years ago, said attitudes toward sustainable building projects have changed dramatically since he entered the business.

“Capital is taking up the conversation,” he said. “It doesn’t have to be a distinction for capital between, ‘this is sustainable’ and getting a (higher) return. You can do both, and it just has a lot to do with the thinking and pieces that come together to move it forward.”

Westeinde said joining forces with Epic ​– which manages more than $17.5 billion worth of assets in the office, retail, industrial and multi-family sectors and has offices in six Canadian cities as well as the U.S. ​– gives the fund instant credibility with well-heeled investors across North America.

“It really became a perfect fit because their focus is at the institutional level and really complements our strengths well,” he said.

​The fund’s initial capital will be earmarked mainly for new developments in Ottawa and southern Ontario that adhere to the principles of the One Planet Living framework created by U.K.-based social enterprise Bioregional.

Such projects are expected to be carbon-neutral, promote local food and agriculture and provide affordable housing among other key elements. Among the developments the funders are looking at is a partnership with the City of Guelph that will showcase urban agriculture in a community known for its thriving agri-tech sector.

Eyeing retrofits

“There will be different themes,” Westeinde noted. “It’s not just about affordability, it’s not just about zero carbon. There’s different elements and we’re highlighting (them) as much as we can in a variety of ways in the developments.”

Windmill and Epic are already looking ahead to a second funding round that will likely zero in on retrofitting class-B and C buildings in Ottawa and Toronto and bringing them up to modern, environmentally sustainable standards.

Westeinde notes that Windmill is already part of a joint venture with the Toronto office of construction giant Ledcor that’s doing just that. He sees it as a way of breathing new life into aging infrastructure while helping the planet.

“We would love to get more inventory like that into our fund pipeline,” he said. “That’s definitely on our radar and something we’d like to spend more time on.”
https://obj.ca/index.php/article/rea...en-real-estate
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  #108  
Old Posted Feb 24, 2021, 1:48 PM
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Ottawa’s office market enters a new era

As workers re-enter workspaces across the city, landlords face new demands from tenants


Caroline Phillips, OBJ
February 23, 2021



This article originally appeared in the BOMA Ottawa Commercial Space Directory. Read the full publication here.

Please, no sympathy cards; the office is not dead. Rather, it’s in the process of redefining itself after tenants were forced to abruptly abandon their spaces for the safety of home before returning with new operating models and expectations of modern workspaces.

The world’s largest impromptu work-from-home experiment has revealed that commuting to the office each and every day is far from the only model. Local commercial real estate experts say the workplace was already headed toward a combination of remote work and office collaboration, and that its evolution was merely fast-tracked by the pandemic.

BOMA Ottawa president Shawn Hamilton sees the hybrid model as a positive development.

“The balance between the two is powerful, in terms of giving people space and flexibility but also preserving culture, leadership, mentoring and collaboration,” he says.

In other words, those hallway chats and watercooler conversations do matter. People are social beings who crave connections and face-to-face conversations. Modern offices have become open, dynamic and stimulating workspaces, with fewer walls and doors.

“An office is another form of community,” says Hamilton. “It’s a way we can interact, it’s a way we feel we belong. We’re with like-minded people; we share ideas.”

Hamilton is blunt: In his view, COVID-19 is not the death of the office.

“It’s a change,” he says. “Change has always been happening and it’s always been accelerating. People should look at this with interest rather than fear.”

Alternative models

Bob Perkins, an Ottawa-based vice-president in Deloitte’s real estate advisory practice, says companies everywhere – including Deloitte – are in the process of determining how much office space they may need in the future.

Many of Deloitte’s own offices across the country are flexible workplaces with unassigned seating. Even before the pandemic, employees of the global advisory firm were accustomed to working remotely on a regular basis.

“The assumption that people are going to come into the office and work five days a week and eight hours a day at their desk is likely gone for us,” says Perkins.

There are, however, a couple of mitigating factors. The emphasis on physical distancing during the pandemic may mean that companies will want extra space for employees to spread out. The amount of office space allocated to each employee has shrunk by roughly 40 per cent over the past couple of decades, from 250 square feet per person to 150 square feet or less.

As well, larger organizations are exploring other workplace options, such as the hub-and-spoke model, Perkins notes. This involves renting smaller spaces across a metropolitan area, as opposed to having one single, large downtown head office, which can be a commuting hassle for some employees.

Conversely, some Ottawa groups and organizations have announced their employees won’t be returning to the office. Ever.

“Frankly, I think it’s myopic,” opines Perkins. “It was too soon to make that determination, and they’ll likely change their mind. I would agree with some of the theory out there that people need a place to collaborate.”

Recovery projected

The commercial real estate industry is expected to make a slow but full recovery, despite current work-from-home trends, according to a 2020 global office impact study done by Cushman & Wakefield, a commercial real estate advisory and consulting firm.

It’s projecting the office leasing market will begin improving in 2022 and return to pre-crisis peak levels by 2025. The study forecasts that the office will continue to play an important role in the economy going forward.



“I would say that tenants are being cautious,” says Nathan Smith, senior vice-president, managing director and broker with Cushman & Wakefield Ottawa. “Some have overreacted, but most have reacted with a wait-and-see attitude.”

Ironically, the old-fashioned office layout – with divided offices and cubicles, and more square-foot space per employee – is what’s needed to slow the spread of the novel coronavirus.

“In an ideal world, if we could turn the clock back 15 or 20 years and everybody was back in their own private offices, it would be perfect (for physical) distancing,” says Smith.

Cushman & Wakefield is forecasting that the number of people working from home will nearly double from the pre-pandemic rate of 5.5 per cent to a post-pandemic rate of about 10 per cent. That means in the Ottawa region, there could be an additional 35,000 people working remotely on a permanent basis, says Smith.

Landlord flexibility

With many companies looking to reduce their office footprint, subletting has become an attractive option for some tenants. It offers move-in ready office space, lower rents and shorter lease terms. But it can also come with non-negotiable terms and certain risks, such as eviction if the sublessor defaults under the master lease.

The good news is that landlords, in trying to lure new tenants to vacant offices, are more open to replacing long-term leases of five to 10 years with more flexible lease arrangements, says Warren Wilkinson, managing director of the Ottawa office of Colliers International, a global real estate services and investment management firm.

“More than ever before, they’ll need to be amenable to six-month, 12-month and 36-month terms,” he says.

Wilkinson expects to see the industry rebound as COVID-19 vaccines are rolled out. He says he’s already seeing an uptick in the number of potential tenants checking out available office and retail spaces.

“It’s nowhere near where the levels used to be pre-pandemic, but it’s well ahead of where we were in the dark days (of) May, June and July,” he says.

Like Wilkinson, Hamilton takes a building-half-full outlook on the future of the office market in Ottawa.

“As work-from-home trickles through the pipeline, people will decrease their footprint, but I also anticipate that the strength of Ottawa as a business community, as a tech hub, as a quality-of-life (destination) will further drive business to come to Ottawa to slowly backfill that space,” Hamilton says. “I think we’ll be more diversified, more resilient and more prosperous as a result.”

Hamilton says he’s impressed with the way landlords and tenants are working together through the current crisis.

“As a whole, the landlord community has responded in an empathetic, proactive way, and I think that’s exciting for our industry going forward,” he says.

Tal Scher is director of property management for The Regional Group, an Ottawa-based real estate firm that manages residential units as well as commercial, industrial and retail space.

He says he and his team are communicating more than ever with their tenants, particularly with those in need of government rent relief.

“I have a really strong relationship with a lot of the tenants now because we’ve had to talk with them about their financial situation, we’ve had to talk with them about how their business is doing,” says Scher, stressing how important it is for landlords to listen to their tenants, especially during challenging times. “You may not agree with everything, but you take what they have to say into account.”

A common COVID-related request from tenants, he says, is the need for frequent cleaning of buildings and specific touch-point areas.

Michael Morin, a commercial property manager at District Realty, says the pandemic has created a “learn-as-you-go” process that involves accommodating the needs of different tenants and different buildings.

“There’s no one answer,” says Morin, whose firm manages more than one million square feet of office space, as well as some retail, light industrial and residential properties. “We’re making sure they know we’re here for them and we’re working with them and their staff to be safe, to continue in business, and to look to the future together.”

https://obj.ca/article/real-estate/n...enters-new-era
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  #109  
Old Posted Feb 24, 2021, 2:22 PM
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The article acknowledges that a return to cubicles may be needed to encourage physical distancing. I'm worried about the Feds move to Office 3.0, which was a terrible idea even before the pandemic. Those types of open offices with absolutely no personal space where people get a new tiny desk everyday, full of the previous person's germs, food crumbs and coffee stains, is a sure way to further decrease morale. Not to mention that common space like break rooms, washrooms and meeting spaces don't keep up with the surging number of workers crammed into the building.

But even now with the clear need for physical distancing and personal space, the Big Government Ship is verrrryyyy slow to turn around. My concern is that the Feds will blow millions or billions on these new Office 3.0 spaces and spend millions or billions more to switch back to 2.0 shortly after.

There are efficiencies to be found in Government, but it's not by arbitrarily laying-off a huge chunk of the workforce like Conservatives often do. It's by shutting off the lights at night, avoiding doing work that will have to be redone soon after, competitive package bids for travel (airlines and hotels) or using VIA instead of flying. It's not always being behind the 8-ball.
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  #110  
Old Posted Feb 24, 2021, 2:23 PM
Tesladom Tesladom is offline
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I think that this may force landlords and employers will need to build better, more liveable office spaces to encourage employees to work from the office.
Ottawa is not like other cities, I think the proportion of Work from Home will be greater here than other markets because of Government and High tech knowledge workers, but having a nice open welcoming office space may lure some people back into the office, even if its not full time.
The Alternative is a barren downtown core in Ottawa

Personally - I always had a hybrid office/home setup, and I still went to the office approx 3-4 days a week for at least part of my day
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  #111  
Old Posted Feb 24, 2021, 2:38 PM
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Originally Posted by J.OT13 View Post
There are efficiencies to be found in Government, but it's not by arbitrarily laying-off a huge chunk of the workforce like Conservatives often do.
With the liberals in charge, I'm sure they won't hesitate from spending billions on office 3.0 just to turn around and spend billions on returning everything to office 2.0. Spending in the red and massive debt that our great, great, grandchildren will still be paying off doesn't worry the Liberal Party of Canada.
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  #112  
Old Posted Feb 24, 2021, 3:02 PM
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Originally Posted by GeoNerd View Post
With the liberals in charge, I'm sure they won't hesitate from spending billions on office 3.0 just to turn around and spend billions on returning everything to office 2.0. Spending in the red and massive debt that our great, great, grandchildren will still be paying off doesn't worry the Liberal Party of Canada.
Conservatives cut too much spending and Liberals overspend. I wish there was an alternative in the middle.
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  #113  
Old Posted Feb 24, 2021, 3:54 PM
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Conservatives cut too much spending and Liberals overspend. I wish there was an alternative in the middle.
I completely agree.

I often wondered if Ontario adopted a sovereignist or "Ontario-first" movement similar to Quebec, could a Bloc-Ontario or Coalition Avenir Ontario style party potentially gain enough votes to lead the country Federally? Wouldn't that be a sh*t show. While the Liberals and Conservatives, and NDP, battled it out in the west and east. An Ontario-only party slips in and leads with a minority government. I know it's a long shot and very unlikely, but an interesting thought none the less.
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  #114  
Old Posted Feb 24, 2021, 7:10 PM
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Originally Posted by J.OT13 View Post
Conservatives cut too much spending and Liberals overspend. I wish there was an alternative in the middle.
Liberals spend too much money on the wrong things*

end corporate subsidies, increase tax on corporations and high-income people.
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  #115  
Old Posted Feb 24, 2021, 7:11 PM
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Originally Posted by GeoNerd View Post
I completely agree.

I often wondered if Ontario adopted a sovereignist or "Ontario-first" movement similar to Quebec, could a Bloc-Ontario or Coalition Avenir Ontario style party potentially gain enough votes to lead the country Federally? Wouldn't that be a sh*t show. While the Liberals and Conservatives, and NDP, battled it out in the west and east. An Ontario-only party slips in and leads with a minority government. I know it's a long shot and very unlikely, but an interesting thought none the less.
That would be something. I just cannot imagine myself being pleased with a Doug Ford type character running the country.
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  #116  
Old Posted May 9, 2021, 7:12 PM
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Amazon is fuelling North America's worst warehouse shortage — and it's right here in Canada
Finding space around Toronto has never been harder and shortage is disrupting businesses and threatening broader economy

Ari Altstedter, Bloomberg News
Publishing date: May 05, 2021 • 3 days ago • 4 minute read




Finding warehouse space around Toronto has never been harder, and the e-commerce fuelled shortage is disrupting businesses and threatening the broader economy.

With the pandemic driving a belated embrace of online shopping in Canada, Amazon.com Inc. has been gobbling up warehouses. That’s pushed the vacancy rate in the Toronto area down to just 0.5 per cent, making it the tightest market in North America, if not the world.

Logistics consultant Richard Kunst is seeing the fallout first hand, as companies try to fill orders and move merchandise. One client, a food manufacturer, has been forced to pack roughly a third of its orders in a parking lot. Others are so desperate for warehouse space Kunst has advised they ask local farmers if they can keep goods in their fields.

“It’s cheaper to go to a farmer and say, ‘tell me how much you’re going to make off a crop on a five acre lot, and I will pay you that, plus 10 per cent, in order to drop containers here,'” Kunst said.

While the warehouse shortage is most acute in Toronto, other major cities in Canada aren’t far behind, with Victoria, Vancouver and Montreal rounding out North America’s top four tightest warehouse markets, according to real estate brokerage Colliers International Group Inc.

The single biggest driver of this squeeze has been Amazon.com. The pandemic has seen the e-commerce giant increase its logistics footprint by nearly 12 million square feet across nine major Canadian markets since the end of 2019, according to Colliers.

That includes taking a quarter of all the space that came up for lease in Toronto last year, while boosting its footprint 10 times in Montreal and quadrupling in Ottawa.

With new warehouse supply lagging the soaring demand, the brokerage CBRE has predicted Canada could run out of space entirely by the end of the year. That’s starting to raise alarms that Canada’s overall economy could be dragged down, just as it starts to recover from the pandemic.

“We become cost uncompetitive when we don’t have a good availability of warehousing,” said Jan De Silva, chief executive officer of the Toronto Region Board of Trade, which represents local businesses in and around Canada’s largest city. “There are fewer jobs, fewer permanent jobs that can be created, because companies aren’t able to fulfill demand.”

Amazon didn’t respond to a request for comment.

While the outlook for other types of commercial property, including offices and hotels, has been clouded by the coronavirus, investors have plowed money into industrial buildings over the last year, betting on the further rise of e-commerce with shoppers stuck at home.

Canada had lagged other developed economies in online shopping. But since the start of the pandemic, e-commerce nearly tripled its share of total Canadian retail sales to 10.4 per cent, government data show.

That’s increased the need for warehouses and fulfillment centre and has pushed prices higher. Colliers estimates the cost of leasing industrial space in the Toronto area went up 25 per cent in 2020.

Because much of what is made in Canada — from car parts, to packaged food, to lumber products — is for export, particularly to the U.S., the increased costs could make Canadian firms less competitive compared to international peers. And for the domestic market, those higher costs could end up being passed on to consumers, quickening inflation.

“Costs to manage the supply chain of the business are going up,” said Mike Croza, the managing partner at Supply Chain Alliance, a consulting firm that works with companies in and around Toronto. “At some point in time as costs go up, there will be some kind of transfer of increase to the consumers.”

To deal with these pressures, developers are starting to explore converting office towers and shopping malls into logistics space. Amazon’s Canadian distribution unit recently purchased a defunct flea market in a suburb of Toronto. Still, the problem may ultimately come down to land.

Though the pandemic has shifted it into high gear, Canada’s housing market has been surging for years, driven by immigration and low interest rates.

With most of these immigrants landing in and around Toronto, Vancouver, and Montreal, local authorities in those cities and their suburbs have steadily converted areas zoned for industrial uses into land for housing to deal with the pressure.

Now, with home prices surging more than 30 per cent around the country, there’s also an acute shortage of warehouse space.

“Really well intentioned levels of government have been saying, ‘OK we have a housing problem, how do we solve that?’ And in solving that, whoops, now we have a warehouse problem, how do we solve that?” De Silva said. “We’ve got this whole chicken and egg situation that we’re trying to unravel.”

Bloomberg.com

https://financialpost.com/real-estat...house-shortage
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  #117  
Old Posted May 25, 2021, 11:38 AM
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Pandemic shopping driving demand for more warehouses in Ottawa
City receives two more development applications near two-year-old Amazon site

Kate Porter · CBC News
Posted: May 25, 2021 4:00 AM ET | Last Updated: 4 hours ago




Ottawa's first Amazon distribution warehouse could soon have company, as demand soars for space to handle all the purchases people are making online during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Two development applications have recently been submitted to the City of Ottawa for sites on Boundary Road in the city's rural east, across from the Amazon warehouse that opened in 2019.

The Carlsbad Springs community was just recently notified about a nearly 6,000-square-metre warehouse proposed by New Brunswick-based Day and Ross. It's similar in size to a new Rosedale Group warehouse nearby.

A second proposal for a warehouse 10 times larger is being put forward by real estate company Avenue 31. It would go right across the road from the Amazon warehouse, and includes plans for more than 100 truck docks.

The demand for e-commerce warehousing in Ottawa is unlike anything Ian Shackell has seen in his three decades working in commercial and industrial real estate.

"There's always been exponential growth in the online delivery of goods and services, but the pandemic has sped it up so much quicker," said Shackell, a vice-president with CBRE Limited.

He gauges the demand is five years ahead of where it would otherwise be.

Cumberland Coun. Catherine Kitts said both files are still in the early stages of their planning approvals, and noted the new official plan will direct industrial distribution warehouses to the city's highway interchanges.

One rezoning in Ottawa's rural southwest, at Roger Stevens Drive at Highway 416, was fiercely challenged and appealed by residents in the community of North Gower.

Members of the community association in Carlsbad Springs, on the other hand, seem somewhat open to new large businesses arriving on Boundary Road. Kitts wants to make sure they're well consulted.

"It's a community that's seeing a lot of change," she said.

Kitts said she could see questions arising about municipal water capacity for the projects, however. That area is served by what's called the Carlsbad "trickle-feed" system, which supplies potable water to homes through small pipes.

Both warehouses are asking to connect to it, and Kitts said residents would want to be reassured their own water won't be affected.

Shackell said with online shopping becoming a regular part of many people's lives, more warehouses are to come, although they might set up on the highways skirting other eastern Ontario towns rather than inside Ottawa city limits.

Companies want land on 400-series highways that's served by municipal water and sewers, Shackell said, but in Ottawa that's both expensive and hard to come by.

"Only the likes of Amazon can afford that kind of price per acre," Shackell said.

The area around the Amazon warehouse and its future neighbours at the Boundary Road interchange isn't the only location that could see more tractor-trailers pulling up with people's packages.

The largest warehouse of all is nearing completion in Barrhaven. A second multi-storey Amazon distribution centre at the Strandherd Drive interchange with Highway 416 has been under construction by developer Broccolini over the past year.

At 260,000 square metres of floor space, it will be almost three times bigger than its two-year-old predecessor in the east.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottaw...mand-1.6036368
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  #118  
Old Posted May 25, 2021, 1:03 PM
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Maybe these developments will finally be enough for the city to provide transit service out to Boundary Rd.
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  #119  
Old Posted Jul 9, 2021, 10:27 PM
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Growing Ottawa real estate firm Jennings acquires 'marquee' Gillin Building

By: David Sali, OBJ
Published: Jul 9, 2021 5:04pm EDT




A rising Ottawa commercial real estate firm that’s poised to branch out into multi-residential development has purchased a prominent downtown office building as it continues to build its portfolio in the capital.

Jennings Real Estate said this week it acquired a 12-storey office tower at 141 Laurier Ave. W. – better known as the Gillin Building – from family-owned local firm Gillin Engineering and Construction. The company would not reveal financial terms of the transaction, which closed on June 30.

Located just west of Elgin Street a stone’s throw from City Hall, the 110,500-square-foot class-A highrise was built by Gillin and opened in 1964.

Its tenants include the City of Ottawa, the Canadian Home Builders’ Association and well-known local accounting firm McCay-Duff.

“We really think the building has held up well from a looks perspective,” said Jennings Real Estate co-owner Ken Jennings, who founded the firm with his brother Christian in 2018.

Calling the building a “marquee” property, Jennings praised its distinctive art deco-style architecture and “great roster of tenants.” He also said the 10,000-square-foot floorplates are ideally suited to being subdivided into smaller chunks suitable for clients in sectors such as professional services and tech.

“That … really hits the mark for a lot of different-sized tenants,” explained Jennings, a 2021 Forty Under 40 award recipient.

The building’s last significant renovation was about 20 years ago. Jennings said his firm will work with local designers and contractors to modernize the lobbies, hallways and common areas – “just kind of putting our own touch on it but trying to keep the classic look.”

The building is currently about 90 per cent occupied. Lindsay Hockey and Oliver Kershaw, principals at Avison Young’s Ottawa office, have been brought on board to help fill the remaining vacancies, and Jennings says the veteran brokers will also be valuable sounding boards when it comes to upgrading the building’s interior.

“They know what tenants are looking for,” he said. “We’re leaning heavily on them and are really looking forward to working on this one with them.”

Jennings now has 11 buildings totalling more than 450,000 square feet in its management and ownership portfolio, including several industrial properties in Nepean and Kanata and office buildings on Hunt Club and Walkley roads.

The Gillin transaction is the young company’s largest to date. It marks another step in the Jennings brothers’ long-term strategy to grow the firm into a major player in the Ottawa real estate scene, a road map that also includes plans to branch out into property development.

Jennings said the nine-employee firm hopes to break ground next year on a pair of mid-rise multi-residential projects that will also include commercial space, one at a downtown site and the other just outside the core.

While it’s dipping its toes into the residential side of things, the company sees a bright future for the office sector in the capital.

According to CBRE, Ottawa’s downtown vacancy rate dipped slightly in the second quarter, from 10.7 to 10.6 per cent, while the class-A rate dropped 20 basis points to 7.7 per cent. Jennings said he thinks the local market will continue to tighten up as time goes on, making buys like the Gillin deal a savvy investment over the long haul.

“If we’re looking at a long-term horizon, it’s a good time to be growing our portfolio,” said Jennings, a lawyer and engineer who spent nearly eight years practising law before joining Ottawa’s Inside Edge Properties – where his brother was a principal and vice-president – as vice-president of acquisitions in 2017.

“Ottawa is a growing city from a population (and) a business perspective,” he added, arguing that musings common in the early days of the pandemic that organizations would move to fully remote operations have grown quieter in recent months.

“I think it’s pretty clear that the office is not going away ... We’re cautiously optimistic in the short term and definitely optimistic in the medium and long term.”

https://www.obj.ca/index.php/article...quires-marquee
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  #120  
Old Posted Jul 24, 2021, 2:45 AM
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Ottawa industrial rents rise to rank among highest in Canada: Colliers

By: OBJ staff
Published: Jul 23, 2021 5:53pm EDT


With the rate of available space once again approaching historic lows, Ottawa has become Canada’s most expensive industrial real estate market east of Vancouver, according to a leading brokerage firm.

Colliers says Ottawa continues to see strong leasing demand from e-commerce and distribution companies. Amazon’s 2.8-million-square-foot fulfillment centre was recently completed by developer Broccolini at 222 Citigate Dr. in Barrhaven, and the e-commerce giant also leased nearly 105,000 square feet at 1000 Legacy Road, just off Hawthorne Road, that it will occupy in the fourth quarter, according to Colliers.

While the citywide availability rate was flat at 2.3 per cent, rental rates continued to rise and reached $11.41 per square foot. That’s up four per cent over the first quarter and 8.6 per cent year over year, putting Ottawa behind only Victoria and Vancouver for the most expensive industrial market in Canada.

Colliers says this high demand, rising rents and the recent successes of other projects are leading to speculative developments picking up across the city, particularly near 400-series highways.

Developer Avenue 31 recently broke ground on its 147,000-square-foot multi-tenant industrial building in the National Capital Business Park near the Hunt Club Road and Highway 417 interchange. It expects to complete the project by mid-2022.

Elsewhere, Colliers notes Colonnade Bridgeport is pre-leasing space at its Dealership Drive project in Barrhaven, as is Manulife for its project at St. Laurent Boulevard and Conroy Road.

https://www.obj.ca/article/real-esta...anada-colliers
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