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Birmingham's office market recorded 288,018 sq ft of take-up in Q4 2025, the highest fourth-quarter figure since 2017, representing a 110% increase from Q4 2024, with annual 2025 take-up totaling 703,430 sq ft and professional services accounting for 40% of activity. Headline rents reached £46 per sq ft in Q4 2025 and subsequently increased to £52 per sq ft in early 2026, with Savills forecasting continued prime rent growth over the next five years as supply remains constrained.

The annual outpatient development report is now available. Produced with collaboration from HREI (Healthcare Real Estate Insights), the 2026 report covers all the outpatient construction projects that broke ground or . . . The post 2026 Outpatient Development Report Recap appeared first on RevistaMed . ]]>

This is the official release of Charter Keck Cramer’s National State of the Market – Residential Build to Sell (BTS) and Build to Rent (BTR) Apartments, H2 2025 report for key metropolitan areas. Report Overview Our Research team has consolidated our market-leading insights into a National State of the Market…

Lodging Econometrics' Q1 2026 U.S. Construction Pipeline Trend Report shows that Dallas leads all U.S. markets with 184 projects and 22,861 rooms in its hotel pipeline, followed by Atlanta, Phoenix, Nashville, and Austin, while Phoenix recorded year-over-year gains of 19% in projects and 11% in rooms under construction. The report details construction activity across pipeline stages, with Phoenix forecasted to top new hotel openings in 2026 with 27 hotels and 3,640 rooms, and Dallas expected to lead in 2027 with 27 new hotels and 2,484 rooms.

The Greater Montreal Area office market in Q1 2026 experienced a total availability rate of 18.4%, down from the previous quarter, with positive net absorption of 252,000 square feet marking the fifth consecutive quarter of growth since 2019. Sublease space declined to 10.9% of available inventory (its lowest level since 2021), while residential conversion projects added 417,000 square feet to the 1.2 million square feet already converted, and a major office sale of the Deloitte Tower to DekaBank for $279 million ($540 per square foot) indicated signs of recovery in higher-quality assets.

This is a quarterly market report published by JLL in March 2026 covering industrial real estate dynamics in Ottawa, Ontario. The report addresses the industrial sector in Ottawa during the first quarter of 2026.

The Greater Montreal Investment Review reports that the Greater Montreal Area saw a 35% year-over-year increase in investment volume in 2025, reaching $10.1 billion in transaction volume for the first half of the year, with multi-residential assets jumping 105%, industrial assets declining 31%, shopping center sales rising 48%, and office transaction volume increasing 22%. Canadian private investors accounted for 57% of all transactional volume in 2025.

This is a market report published by JLL in Q1 2026 covering industrial sector dynamics in Calgary, Alberta. The report examines conditions and trends in the Calgary industrial market as of the first quarter of 2026.

Calgary office vacancy reached 21.2% in Q1 2026, down 200 basis points from a year ago. Industrial vacancy was essentially flat at 5.2%, up just 10 basis points from the prior quarter, while retail vacancy rose to 4.7% at year-end 2025 from 3.6% in Q3 2025.

Oklahoma City's office market in Q1 2026 showed a 28.8% vacancy rate with $19.78 asking rent per square foot, driven by an economy with 3.6% unemployment (below the 3.4% national average) and diversified employment across energy, aerospace, technology, and manufacturing sectors. The market has experienced measured supply growth with 6,000 square feet of year-to-date net absorption, sustained leasing in North and Northwest submarkets, and is seeing tenant demand shift toward smaller, higher-quality spaces supported by generous tenant improvement allowances ranging from $30–$50 to $75–$100 per square foot for shell space.

The Pittsburgh industrial market posted 166,330 square feet of net absorption in Q1 2026 following its first year of negative absorption since 2017, with the overall vacancy rate holding steady at 6.3% while warehouse/distribution space continued to drive leasing activity at approximately 400,000 square feet leased for the quarter. Manufacturing space accounted for 43.6% of total new leasing activity in Q1 2026 compared to 13.7% in 2025, pushing total quarterly leasing to just under 920,000 square feet, a 42.8% increase over Q1 2025, with just 385,000 square feet under construction across the entire metro.

The Metro Vancouver industrial market report for Q1 2026 indicates that overall vacancy tightened to 4.1% from 4.5% in the previous quarter, with strong demand concentrated in smaller units under 10,000 square feet and large-bay units exceeding 100,000 square feet, while new supply remained constrained at 768,409 square feet. Development activity shifted toward tenant-specific build-to-suit projects, which accounted for 50% of new construction starts totaling just over 900,000 square feet of the 1.1 million square feet that broke ground, while speculative and strata development declined sharply to 22% of starts from a 2025 average of 63%.

Pittsburgh's office market in Q1 2026 experienced a marginal increase in overall vacancy to 17.4% amid year-to-date net absorption losses of 251,400 square feet, with asking rents at $25.77 per square foot across all property classes. Despite elevated vacancy, Class A space in the Central Business District remains in high demand with limited supply, enabling landlords to maintain pricing power and achieve 6.3% rent growth since the 2024 bottom, while expansion activity by tenants suggests some correction of earlier aggressive downsizing decisions.

Vancouver's multifamily market report by Avison Young covers H1 2025 trends, noting that nearly 20,000 rental units are under construction as of July 2025 despite structural challenges expected to create supply shortfalls in 2-3 years, while the market has shifted toward buyers with cap rates exceeding 4%, vacancy at 1.9%, average rents at $2,830 per month, and annual rent declines of 7.0%. The report identifies private capital as increasingly dominant as institutional investors retreat, with activity concentrated in value-add segments and well-located competitively-priced assets, while zoning reforms and federal programs support affordable housing development.

This is a market report published by Colliers in March 2026 covering the multifamily sector in the Greater Toronto Area. The report presents first-quarter 2026 data and analysis for the residential rental market in that region.

This is a market report on the Pittsburgh office sector published by Colliers in Q1 2026, covering office market conditions in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania with reference to broader geographic contexts including Philadelphia and national markets.

This is an industrial real estate market report published by Colliers in March 2026 covering the Pittsburgh market with references to Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, and national geographies.

Pittsburgh's office market showed early signs of stabilization in 2025, with positive net absorption in the third and fourth quarters helping to reduce overall vacancy to 24.4% by year-end, while Class A rents remained flat at approximately $29.59/SF and Class B edged modestly upward to $22.57/SF. The local economy outperformed national trends with Pittsburgh's unemployment at 3.9% versus 4.4% nationally as of September 2025, job growth led by Education and Healthcare at 3.8% and Financial activities at 2.3%, though the market experienced zero speculative office construction in 2025 due to persistent high vacancy and rising construction costs.

New Jersey's industrial market in Q4 2025 achieved 28.8 million square feet of new leasing activity—the third-highest annual total on record—with the Turnpike Corridor accounting for 70.5% of year-to-date activity, though the vacancy rate rose to 8.9% due to 4.4 million square feet of new deliveries and 2.2 million square feet of negative net absorption in the fourth quarter. The Port of New York and New Jersey recorded a 2.9% year-over-year increase in container volume through November, while overall asking rent declined 4.8% year-over-year to $16.60 per square foot, with Class A warehouse and distribution properties showing stronger resilience than non-Class A assets.

Oklahoma City's office market in Q4 2025 showed a 29.6% overall vacancy rate with negative year-to-date net absorption of 305,000 square feet and an asking rent of $19.18 per square foot, supported by strong economic fundamentals including 2.9% unemployment, 18% metro population growth since 2010, and diversification beyond energy into aerospace, technology, and manufacturing sectors. The market outlook indicates a shift toward smaller, high-quality spaces concentrated in North and Northwest submarkets, with tenant improvement allowances nearly doubling to $75–$100 per square foot for shell space and adaptive reuse projects converting office buildings to residential uses expected to help reduce vacancy pressures.

New Jersey's office market recorded its third consecutive quarter of positive net absorption in Q4 2025, with 758,000 square feet of year-to-date gains and an overall vacancy rate of 21.9% (16.4% using the median vacancy rate metric), while asking rents remained flat year-over-year at $32.33 per square foot. Northern New Jersey drove momentum with 1.6 million square feet of annual net occupancy gains and a declining vacancy rate, though Central New Jersey faced headwinds from major tenant departures including Sanofi's 467,149-square-foot sublease listing and MetLife's 400,000-square-foot exit in Bridgewater.

This is a multifamily market report published by Berkadia in June 2025 covering the New Orleans market at mid-year. The report addresses the multifamily sector in New Orleans, Louisiana with reference to national markets.

Northern New Jersey's office market recorded 1.9 million square feet of leasing activity in the first quarter of 2026, slightly below the two-year quarterly average of 2.1 million square feet, while the overall availability rate decreased 20 basis points to 22.7% driven by 240,846 square feet of positive net absorption. Key findings include sublease availability declining to 5.9 million square feet—the lowest level in six years—Class A office leasing accounting for more than 72.3% of overall activity, and overall asking rents averaging $32.12 per square foot with a 0.38% year-over-year increase, with Class A pricing at $35.29 per square foot representing a 9.3% premium.

This is a market report published by JLL in March 2026 covering industrial sector dynamics in the Baltimore market during the first quarter of 2026. The report includes national geography tags in addition to the Baltimore, Maryland focus.

The Cushman & Wakefield Kansas City Industrial Q1 2026 report covers the commercial industrial real estate market, documenting a 5.9% vacancy rate, 1.8 million square feet of year-to-date net absorption, and an asking rent of $5.75 per square foot, with the overall market showing positive absorption and declining vacancy in the first quarter. The document notes that after the national industrial market cooled in 2024 and 2025, Kansas City saw leasing activity decline from a 2021 peak of 14.9 million square feet to 10.9 million square feet in 2025, though absorption rebounded to a record 11.8 million square feet in 2025, and indicates that increased vacancy in older Class B warehouse buildings alongside falling Modern Distribution vacancy may signal demand for new development.

Baltimore's industrial market experienced rising vacancy of 9.0% (up 160 basis points year-over-year) and negative net absorption of 55.8k square feet year-to-date in Q1 2026, with leasing activity declining 10% below 2025 quarterly averages while development shifted from the I-95 North Corridor to the Baltimore-Washington Corridor. Development under construction totaled 1.7 million square feet (down 44% year-over-year) with only 323,250 square feet delivered, while asking rent remained at $11.14 per square foot and submarket performance diverged significantly, with the I-95 North recording positive absorption and the Baltimore-Washington Corridor recording negative absorption driven by Class B space losses.

Newmark's Richmond Industrial Market Overview for first quarter 2026 presents economic and leasing fundamentals for the region's industrial real estate sector. Key findings include a 5.8% vacancy rate (11th-tightest nationally), average asking rents of $8.09/SF with 7.3% year-over-year growth, 1.4 million SF of first-quarter deliveries with 70,000 SF of negative net absorption, 9.4 million SF under construction, and an unemployment rate of 3.6% significantly below the national average of 4.4%.

New Jersey's industrial market recorded 9.5 million square feet of new leasing activity in Q1 2026, a 45.2% year-over-year increase, with the Exit 8A submarket leading recovery after two years of occupancy losses. The overall vacancy rate declined to 8.7%, average asking rent stood at $16.33 per square foot, and the Port of New York and New Jersey achieved 749,906 TEUs in January 2026, up 4.0% year-over-year, supported by strong gains in rail and auto volumes.

The St. Louis industrial market closed Q1 2026 with a 4.6% vacancy rate and overall asking rents of $5.71 per square foot, with the vacancy increase driven primarily by large-scale vacancies including Royal Canin's departure from a 674,752-square-foot warehouse in the Metro East. The market recorded negative quarterly net absorption of 946,757 square feet in Q1 2026, marking the first consecutive quarters of negative absorption since 2023, though underlying demand remained healthy with over 1.1 million square feet of new leasing activity and just under 2.0 million square feet of renewal activity during the quarter.

Northern Virginia's office market recorded new leasing of 530,000 square feet in Q1 2026, down from 1.1 million square feet in Q1 2025, with overall vacancy rising to 24.0% and asking rents reaching $35.81 per square foot on a full-service basis. Class A assets captured 85% of new leasing and 95% of renewals, with Fairfax leading regional activity at 348,000 square feet of new leasing, while net absorption remained slightly negative at negative 27,000 square feet for the quarter.

This is a market report published by JLL in March 2026 covering office sector dynamics in Richmond, Virginia during the first quarter of 2026. The report appears to address both Richmond-specific and national office market conditions.

The St. Louis industrial market experienced negative net absorption of 1.3 million SF in the first quarter of 2026, with vacancy rising 150 basis points year-over-year to 6.0%, driven primarily by major tenant relocations including Proctor & Gamble's 806,400-SF exit and Save-A-Lot's 420,000-SF departure. The region's December unemployment rate decreased to 4.0%, 40 basis points below the national average, though industrial employment in Manufacturing and Trade/Transportation/Utilities sectors declined by 1.9% and 2.4% respectively, with the construction pipeline dominated by 3.9 million SF of build-to-suit projects representing 89% of development.

This is a quarterly data report published by CBRE on March 31, 2026, presenting office sector figures for New Jersey in the first quarter of 2026, with coverage spanning northern New Jersey and national markets.

The Kansas City office market recorded 171,000 square feet of year-to-date net absorption in Q1 2026, with an overall vacancy rate of 18.7% and asking rent of $23.19 per square foot across all property classes. The market showed strong performance driven by large tenant move-ins at Crown Center and expected major occupancy of approximately 425,000 square feet at Aspiria later in 2026, though speculative development remains limited despite continued flight-to-quality trends favoring top-tier space.

Richmond's industrial market experienced sustained economic growth in Q1 2026 with major company expansions including Solstice Advanced Materials' $220 million investment and over 300 new jobs announced, while vacancy rose to 4.6% due to delivery of 1.78 million square feet of speculative projects including 700,000 square feet of data center space. Asking rents increased 5.5% year-over-year for warehouse space with Class A product in the mid-$9 per square foot range, and first-quarter leasing activity totaled 860,000 square feet with sales volume at $44.5 million after a strong fourth quarter.