Paula C. Squires// April 24, 2013//
2012 data compiled by the Charlottesville office of CBRE show a commercial office market with strong demand and limited vacancy downtown.
“Overall we describe the region as ‘stable’, since modest declines in certain market segments were off-set by modest gains in others. For example, despite an uptick in vacancy in both the North and the East quadrants, rental rates increased in the market on average year-over-year, with downtown experiencing positive net absorption and a continued shortage of available Class A office space,” Cass Kawecki, vice president at CBRE|Charlottesville, said in a statement.
The market report, presented to the Charlottesville Regional Chamber of Commerce, notes that as of 2012 there was about 1.8 million square feet of Class A commercial space in the Charlottesville region (excluding owner-occupied, condominiums and institutional space), of which 13.8 percent was vacant. That’s below the national average vacancy for Class A office for the same period of 15.4 percent, but it’s higher than the rate of 11.7 percent that Charlottesville experienced in 2011.
Other 2012 economic indicators include:
· A slight increase in average rental rates, from $22.19 per square feet to $22.30 per square feet.
· Negative net absorption overall in the market primarily because of increased availability in the U.Va. Research Park on 29 North.
· Continued unemployment rates below national and state averages.
o