London's industrial land values rising at 'unprecedented' rate

The cost of industrial land in the city has risen by about a third over the last two years

Image | Maple Leaf Foods Inc--Maple Leaf Foods to Construct World-Class

Caption: An architectural rendering of the future Maple Leaf Foods poultry processing facility in London, Ont. (CNW/Maple Leaf Foods Inc.)

Industrial land is so hot in London, prices have risen by about a third over the last two years, according to commercial real estate and investment group, CBRE.
I've never seen that level of increase over such a short period of time. - Peter Whatmore, CBRE
"It's pretty unprecedented in London," said Peter Whatmore a CBRE vice-president and a broker for southwestern Ontario. "I've never seen that level of increase over such a short period of time."
The price per acre for industrial land in London has risen by $5,000 an acre in the last few years to $70,000 an acre for plots larger than four acres and $80,000 per acre for plots smaller than four acres, according to Bill Warner the manager of realty services for the City of London.
"We've had a couple of very good years," Warner said. "There's definitely interest in some of those larger warehouse and distribution developers."

Image | Peter Whatmore

Caption: Peter Whatmore is the broker of CBRE Southwestern Ontario, an area that includes London, Waterloo Region and Windsor. (Peter Whatmore/CBRE)

Whatmore said rising industrial land values is something that's happening across North America, as expanding e-commerce and manufacturing companies look to bolster warehouse and distribution space along key transportation routes, such as Highway 401.
"We have an amazing location in London on the 401 corridor, but our challenge is that we're so far away from the GTA that we don't get all the positive impacts that say a Kitchener, a Cambridge and a Guelph gets because they're on the doorstep of Toronto," he said.
Despite that challenge, Whatmore said London has some pretty impressive feathers in its cap, chief among them is the new $660 million Maple Leaf Food poultry processing plant set to be built in the city's south end. It's the largest single-site investment in the Canadian food industry.

Media Video | CBC News London : Maple Leaf Foods CEO describes the new London plant

Caption: Maple Leaf Foods CEO Michael McCain says the London facility will be state of the art and fully sustainable.

Open Full Embed in New Tab (external link)Loading external pages may require significantly more data usage.
"There is some fairly significant growth happening in the industrial sector," he said.
Whatmore said the Maple Leaf's arrival in London will likely also herald a number of positive economic spinoffs, including bolstering the local service sector and the potential relocation of suppliers.

London office vacancies remain 'stubbornly high'

Image | Info-Tech downtown office

Caption: Info-Tech research group has spent 18 months and $17 million transforming this cluster of historic factory buildings into a 21st century office space. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

While industrial space in London might be a hot commodity, commercial office space doesn't seem to have the same allure.
"The office market has been stubbornly high for a considerable period of time," Whatmore said. "The more of that we can get occupied the better."
What's driving the surplus of office space is the fact companies have been ruthlessly trimming their bottom lines for decades, including trying to make their footprint smaller and more compact.
Very rare do you find a site that big in a city of our size. - CBRE's Peter Whatmore on the former London Psychiatric Hospital
Whatmore said the glut of empty offices in the cities means a company looking for more space or a better location might be able to find a number options at a bargain.
Even though commercial office space remains relatively cheap in the city, many companies are looking for the prestige of upgrading historical space through renovations, such as Roundhouse London, located at the former Great West Beef Co. on Horton Street or Info-Tech Research Group, inside a former metal works on Talbot Street at King.

Media Video | CBC News London : Take a tour of Info-Tech's new London office with company founder Joel McLean

Caption:

Open Full Embed in New Tab (external link)Loading external pages may require significantly more data usage.
"[Those] are great examples of some old industrial facilities that have been incredibly repositioned," Whatmore said. "Unfortunately in London, we don't have a lot of that kind of product."
"They're doing it as part of a workplace strategy in many cases, creating collaborative, funky, interesting spaces for people to work makes for a much more collaborative environment," he said.

Image | former London Psychiatric Hospital

Caption: The London Asylum for the Insane opened in 1870. The expansive site has been sold to Old Oak Properties. (Regional Mental Health Care collection at Western University Archives)

One of most exciting real estate projects in London, according to Whatmore, is the redevelopment of the former London Psychiatric Hospital lands in the Oxford and Highbury area.
"I think the most interesting thing about it is its 175 acres of land, more development in the heart of the city," he said. "That is an incredible opportunity and very rare do you find a site that big in a city of our size."
Whatmore said the property also has unique historic character, which the developers will use in their modernization of the former hospital grounds.
"I think if you look at it five to 10 years from now, you'll find that they found a way to bring those elements into the community and make them really cool, funky spaces and we don't have a lot of that in London."