Dimitrie-Pompeiu area ranks third with 440,700 sq.m of offices, and on the fourth place there is the Center area with 405,500 sq.m. The smallest office stocks are still found in the East (51,100 sq.m) and the South (41,800 sq.m) of Bucharest.
In fact, the Center-West area was also the most sought after by tenants this year, attracting approximately a quarter of the demand, this being closely followed by the Floreasca – Barbu Vacarescu area, with approximately 21 percent of the total office spaces transacted. Other areas of interest for tenants were the CBD and Center, while no leasing transactions were closed in the West and South areas.
In terms of demand, in the analyzed period (April-June 2022), there have been transacted 75,800 sq.m of spaces, therefore the total leased areas in H1 2022 increased by 32 percent compared to the same period of 2021, up to 156,600 sq.m.
The new net take-up (excluding renewals/renegotiations of existing contracts) had a consistent share of 66 percent of the total transacted in H1 2022 (compared with 59 percent in H1 2021), a positive aspect which has also resulted in a slight q-o-q overall vacancy rate decrease to a level of 14.9 percent, a level which is partly explained by the difference in vacancies between A-class (12.6 percent) and B-class (22.7 percent) buildings.
The prime headline rent in Bucharest has seen a small increase in Q2 2022, to a level of around €19.00/sq. m/month in the CBD, the first increase after a period of six quarters of stagnation at 18.5 euros/sq m/month. The ascending trend could extend until the end of the year in other submarkets in Bucharest, known as important office hubs, such as the Center and Floreasca – Barbu Vacarescu.
Madalina Cojocaru, Partner Office Agency Cushman & Wakefield Echinox: “Office developers in Bucharest are watching very carefully what is happening at the City Hall because they are willing to invest in new projects, but there is no clear visibility of what will happen. There are developers who either already own the land, but are not in the position to authorize it, or are willing to acquire new land, but investment decisions are difficult to be made mainly due to the prolongated uncertainty related to PUZs approvals. It should also be mentioned that most developers on the office market in Romania have a strategy to build, rent and then sell the new projects, so the effects of the slowdown in new constructions will also impact the investment market.”
Currently, projects totaling 134,000 sq.m are under construction in Bucharest, which are to be completed in 2022 and 2023, a level far below the average of deliveries in recent years, being the result mainly of the blocking of PUZs, a complicated situation in which, as very few real estate projects received their building permits during the last 12 months.
One Cotroceni Park II, U-Center II or Equilibrium II are among the most important projects to be delivered by the end of 2023.