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Office rental rates fall in Hub
Average is down 12% as recession forces area firms to cut back
By Casey Ross
Globe Staff / July 10, 2009
Boston?s office market is experiencing the sharpest drop in rental rates in nearly a decade, with the supply of vacant space continuing to increase as employers cut back during the economic slowdown.
Average asking rents in Greater Boston plunged to $28.11 per square foot in the second quarter of 2009, a 12 percent decline from the same period last year, according to Lincoln Property Co., a real estate services firm. Rents are at their lowest level since 2001.
The drop-off is being felt throughout the market, from downtown Boston to the outer suburbs, reflecting the pervasive impact of the recession. Those shedding space include financial and law firms in Boston, pharmaceutical and technology firms along Interstate 495, and Cambridge consulting companies.
?The downturn is much broader and deeper this time,?? said Mike Edward, head of brokerage for Lincoln. ?In 2001, it was the tech sector, but now it?s really spread across all industries.??
Companies are flooding the market with space available for sublease, a measure of the weakness in the real estate market. There is now more than 5.1 million square feet of sublease space across the region, 40 percent more than a year ago, according to the real estate firm Jones Lang LaSalle.
Among newly available space is 134,000 square feet at 100 Federal St. that was used by financial giant Wellington Management and 88,000 square feet at Thomson Place from Cengage Learning Inc., an educational publishing firm. IBM Corp., Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Inc., and the law firm Ropes & Gray LLP are also trying to lease out blocks of space.
While the market changes are not as extreme as in 2001, real estate specialists said the upheaval is far from over.
?Space is going to continue to come on the market, and rents are going to be flat for three to four years,?? said Joe Sciolla, managing principal of Cresa Partners, an advisory firm that exclusively represents office tenants. ?I don?t see employment coming back right away to substantiate rent growth.??
In the meantime, some firms are taking advantage of the down market to upgrade. ITG Inc., a financial services firm, is moving to 100 High St., a 28-story tower in the Financial District, a significant step up from the pair of low-rise buildings it now occupies on the South Boston Waterfront.
?The timing worked to our advantage,?? said Carolyn Freeland, a spokeswoman for ITG. She declined to disclose the firm?s rent at 100 High St. but indicated ITG was able to benefit from the market conditions.
Edward, the brokerage chief for Lincoln Property, said bargain hunters are bringing the market back to life, but the volume of transactions is still low and will remain so for many months.
?I?m hoping we?ll bottom out in the middle of next year, and then we?ll begin the climb back,?? he said.
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Average is down 12% as recession forces area firms to cut back
By Casey Ross
Globe Staff / July 10, 2009
Boston?s office market is experiencing the sharpest drop in rental rates in nearly a decade, with the supply of vacant space continuing to increase as employers cut back during the economic slowdown.
Average asking rents in Greater Boston plunged to $28.11 per square foot in the second quarter of 2009, a 12 percent decline from the same period last year, according to Lincoln Property Co., a real estate services firm. Rents are at their lowest level since 2001.
The drop-off is being felt throughout the market, from downtown Boston to the outer suburbs, reflecting the pervasive impact of the recession. Those shedding space include financial and law firms in Boston, pharmaceutical and technology firms along Interstate 495, and Cambridge consulting companies.
?The downturn is much broader and deeper this time,?? said Mike Edward, head of brokerage for Lincoln. ?In 2001, it was the tech sector, but now it?s really spread across all industries.??
Companies are flooding the market with space available for sublease, a measure of the weakness in the real estate market. There is now more than 5.1 million square feet of sublease space across the region, 40 percent more than a year ago, according to the real estate firm Jones Lang LaSalle.
Among newly available space is 134,000 square feet at 100 Federal St. that was used by financial giant Wellington Management and 88,000 square feet at Thomson Place from Cengage Learning Inc., an educational publishing firm. IBM Corp., Harvard Pilgrim Health Care Inc., and the law firm Ropes & Gray LLP are also trying to lease out blocks of space.
While the market changes are not as extreme as in 2001, real estate specialists said the upheaval is far from over.
?Space is going to continue to come on the market, and rents are going to be flat for three to four years,?? said Joe Sciolla, managing principal of Cresa Partners, an advisory firm that exclusively represents office tenants. ?I don?t see employment coming back right away to substantiate rent growth.??
In the meantime, some firms are taking advantage of the down market to upgrade. ITG Inc., a financial services firm, is moving to 100 High St., a 28-story tower in the Financial District, a significant step up from the pair of low-rise buildings it now occupies on the South Boston Waterfront.
?The timing worked to our advantage,?? said Carolyn Freeland, a spokeswoman for ITG. She declined to disclose the firm?s rent at 100 High St. but indicated ITG was able to benefit from the market conditions.
Edward, the brokerage chief for Lincoln Property, said bargain hunters are bringing the market back to life, but the volume of transactions is still low and will remain so for many months.
?I?m hoping we?ll bottom out in the middle of next year, and then we?ll begin the climb back,?? he said.
Link