UrbanRED
Active Member
Candidly, I suspect that office vacancy will be a huge problem for a long time for many many cities. Calgary was just hit with the double whammy of oil + remote work. A lot of those tech companies are remote and have workers all over the country, even if their HQs are in Calgary.I was hearing on the news last night when they announced these recent residential conversions, that the downtown vacancy rate is at a new high of 33%. So even with all these new tech companies coming on board and occupying some of the space, it has not made any difference. Office space is emptying faster than it can be reoccupied.
Apparently the city's objective with more conversions and other business migration, is to reduce the vacancy rate to under 20% .... but that is in 10 years time!!!
Wow ... anything close to 20% vacancy is still a big problem in the year 2032.
Seattle's downtown office vacancy is near 20%, San Francisco is at 24%, Houston is ~24%. Some of those may get worse before they get better, as commercial leases roll off in the next few years. In Canada Calgary has had it the worst, but Vancouver is near 8% and that's the tightest market in North America (it was ~2% pre-COVID).