Portland, Ore.
Steady leasing activity, rising rental rates and growing demand from technology tenants reaffirmed the strength of the Portland office market during the first quarter of 2017. With new product deliveries and a large office space user exiting the city, the market experienced negative net absorption of 74,977 sq. ft. and a slight uptick in overall vacancy from 8.1 percent to 8.2 percent, according to a Kidder Mathews’s first quarter 2017 market report. That followed a year when the city saw positive absorption of nearly 1.4 million sq. ft. At the end of the first quarter 2017, vacancy average 10.1 percent in the CBD and 7.3 percent in suburban sub-markets. However, vacancy in the Pearl District/Chinatown sub-market, which is popular with tech firms, was just 6.6 percent and will continue to tighten, according to Kidder Mathews.
A Colliers report noted that while office development in 2016 set a record, with more than 1 million sq. ft. in deliveries of new and adapted space, pre-leasing levels increased. According to the Kidder Mathews report, of the 7.33 million sq. ft. currently under construction, 55 percent is pre-leased.
“Portland is unique in that it is the most affordable area on the West Coast, and people want to live there,” Chang says. Numerous tech companies have opened offices in Portland to take advantage of the city’s young talent pool, he notes. As a result, 31,000 jobs were created in 2016.
Additionally, real estate costs in the city are also attractive, he says, noting that the average asking rent in Portland is $25 per sq. ft., compared to $60 per sq. ft. in San Francisco and $50 per sq. ft. in San Jose.
The Colliers report noted that total 2016 investment sales volume for the Portland metro areas totaled about $1 billion. Kidder Mathews reported that the average price per sq. ft. climbed to $252.