Belfast is ready to bounce back | Insight – Property Week

Posted: April 15, 2021 at 6:30 am

As large corporates weigh up the pros and cons of the office versus working from home, PwCs commitment to Merchant Square sends a strong signal about its faith in the future of Belfasts office sector. Its commitment to the scheme, which last month became the provinces biggest investment deal when it was sold by Oakland Holdings to a Middle Eastern investor for 87m, could also aidthe regeneration of Belfasts staid core.

So, just how big a role could the accounting giants commitment to Belfast play as we slowly emerge from lockdown?

The office sector in Belfast, along with every other UK town and city, has taken a massive hit from Covid. Figures from Savills show a significant drop in take-up from around 517,000 sq ft in 2019 to 140,000 sq ft in 2020. Data from CBRE shows that 2020 rents for grade-A office space stood between 21/sq ft and 23/sq ft, while rents for refurbished space were around 18/sq ft to 20/sq ft.

Commentators say it is too early to know whether Brexit will also have an impact on the market, but Belfast is expected to emerge from the pandemic stronger and raring to go.

PwCs tenancy announcement has already heralded a mini tsunami in lease take-ups by retail and leisure operators.

Merchant Square is a good location with leisure and public transport

Kevin MacAllister, PwC

No sooner had we signed our deal on Merchant Square than every lease and restaurant was taken up in the surrounding area, says Kevin MacAllister, regional market leader for Northern Ireland at PwC. We will not single-handedly regenerate Belfast city centre, but we are going a fair way to kickstarting it.

Progress would be swifter if there was not a shortage of office space, but the many statement buildings now under way or with planning consent should remedy this (see panel, overleaf).

Several huge projects are also set to alter the face of Belfast in the coming decades. There is Weavers Cross, a new 1bn regional transport hub; The Sixth, which is set to open in the old Belfast Telegraph Building; the Destination Hub a new 100m tourist attraction and cultural hub that the council is currently looking for a site for; and Smithfield Yard, just off the main retail thoroughfare.

All these are making developers salivate and, following the Merchant Square sale, investors are now watching the city closely.

A commitment of this scale [in buying Merchant Square] from an international investor new to the jurisdiction shows the exciting and unique place our market finds itself in, says Ben Turtle, director of investment at Savills. We are aware of other assets being prepared for market that will further test the depth of interest in Northern Ireland.

Brian Lavery, managing director Belfast at CBRE, describes the Merchant Square deal as a shot in the arm for not only the citys market but for PwC, making it clear they are going back into the office to be an office tenant.

There is a certain irony in PwC taking Merchant Square given it originally occupied the building two decades ago when it was known as Ferguson & Rushton. However, according to MacAllister, PwCs move was not because those of us who had worked there before [were] feeling in any way sentimental.

He says the building is well-located in the city centre and has a thriving leisure scene and good public transport links, so signing on the dotted line was a no-brainer.

When Covid struck, it seemed the world of professional services occupying big office development was gone, that we were going tomove into virtual working forever, says MacAllister. But we were never convinced that was the case. We are talking about future-proofing our business developing a place where people want to be, rather than have to be.

Merchant Square is just a few hundred yards away from the proposed Weavers Cross transport-led regeneration scheme. The eight-hectare site, in the heart of the city, will be home to a modern, high-capacity transport hub and mixed-use developments, including large swathes of offices. Set to be developed on the site of the existing Europa bus centre and Great Victoria Street railway station, the 1bn scheme promises to create 50,000 new jobs.

MacAllister says the development is seen as a huge catalyst for Belfasts regeneration. [Weavers Cross] is certainly influencing our decision to move in that direction because that will bring the whole life into the city centre.

Another development that will have a significant impact on the local property market is The Sixth. In February 2019, the 80m joint venture between Belfast City Council and McAleer & Rushe got the go-ahead. The 300,000 sq ft mixed-use scheme at the old Belfast Telegraph site on Royal Avenue will have 230,000 sq ft of workspace, and potential for a global HQ with floorplates of upto 30,000 sq ft.

The Sixth will be next to Ulster Universitys new 250m Belfast campus. The 750,000 sq ft site will house up to 15,000 students and staff the equivalent of a population the size of Armagh being dropped into one end of the city. The biggest change in Belfast is going to be the Ulster University campus, says Patrick OGorman, principal at Bywater Properties, which along with partner Ashmour is bringing its own changes tothe city.

Together they are refurbishing a 30,000 sq ft building, 35DP, which is five floors above the Boots shop on Donegall Place and set to be completed in early July.

Its a slightly untested environment for office space because traditionally the upper floors in Belfast have been left fallow above retail, says Gareth Howell, director at Savills, the schemes leasing agent.

Potential occupiers have clearly not been put off by the location,as the building is close to being under offer on half the space.

The Bywater/Ashmour partnership is also bringing on Smithfield Yard, a 167,000 sq ft mixed-use scheme with 152,000 sq ft of offices, which is currently populated by a hub of independent retailers. The scheme has planning permission and is viewed as a long-term prospect when market conditions allow.

It is one of the things that attracted us to working in Belfast, says Theo Michell, principal at Bywater. You dont get many major city centres in the UK where you get vacant sites that have sat for a long time with not much happening. But its right off Royal Avenue, slap bang in the city centre.

At all the new schemes and developments being brought forward in Belfast city centre, the spotlight is very much on wellbeing and ESG.

The wellness agenda was ramping up pre-pandemic, [but Covid has] sped up that process, says David Wright, director at CBRE Belfast. Theres going to be a flight to quality in the short term. We have a lot of secondary-type buildings in Belfast that arent fit for purpose.

Merchant Square has an entire floor dedicated to wellbeing, hosting pilates and yoga classes along with social activities. And next door is a building leading the charge on wellbeing.

The Lotus Group is developing The Well, a 36,000 sq ft office building on Wellington Street that has a strong focus on wellness and will be delivered in 2023. Already dubbed the healthiest building in Belfast, its website boasts it will be an office utopia where the air is clean, the lights are controlled and the journey from door to desk is 100% touch-free.

Alastair Coulson, managing director of The Lotus Group, says he has no worries about leasing activity post-pandemic. We bought a building in a really prime location next to the city centre, and the new transport hub [Weavers Cross] is going to be opposite PwCs new building so location is A1. We were always confident we were in the right location.

Despite the challenges the industry has faced over the last 12 months, Coulson is optimistic about the future. There are a lot of great developers doing great things in the city. That all [aids] Belfast plc, as a rising tide helpsall ships.

Here is the original post:

Belfast is ready to bounce back | Insight - Property Week

Related Posts