By ODINAKA MBONU
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A
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report
on the property market in sub-Saharan Africa prepared annually by Broll
Property Services has shown that Nigeria is the most expensive market for the
office space segment of the market.
The report explains that as against Ghana’s
$37 monthly for a square metre in a Grade A office space and $26 apiece in
Mauritius and Madagascar for the same period, a square metre in an Grade A
office space in Lagos or Port Harcourt could rent for as high as $70 a month,
making it 100 percent higher.
Broll, one of Africa’s leading commercial
property service providers, claims that despite the availability of prime
properties in major city centres such as Lagos and Abuja, the needs of some
international tenants seeking befitting office spaces are yet to be met, thus
increasing the rents of the available spaces as demand for same outstrips
supply.
Looking at other sub-Saharan African
countries, in Rwanda and Namibia, respectively, the rents are $20 and $18 per
square metre, while it is between $15 and $19 in Kenya within the same period.
In Malawi, rent per square metre ranges
between $13 and $6 monthly, while Zimbabwe’s paltry $11 per square metre has
been attributed to poor economic climate as most office spaces in major cities
remain vacant.
“Despite the springing up of several A-grade
structures in recent times such as Maersk House, Churchgate II Towers, Eko
Towers, FF Towers, and Mansard Place all located on Victoria Island axis of
Lagos, rentals for these developments have remained relatively high with yearly
rents ranging between $600 and $850 per square metre,” the report further
explained.
Obi Nwogugu, head, real estate unit, Africa
Capital Alliance, had earlier told BusinessDay that “the office space market
has seen continued growth in recent times”, estimating that the market is
expecting about 250,000 square metres office space in the near future between
Ikoyi and Victoria Island axis of Lagos where there is business hub.
Meanwhile, the global office market is
expected to witness a steady growth in 2014, as companies globally demand for a
conducive workplace that improves productivity and workplace satisfaction which
are rare in old office stock, a recent report by Cushman & Wakefield has
said.
Market observers believe the growth will also
be visible in Nigeria’s commercial space with the delivery of major projects
such as the Kanti Towers in Victoria Island, while work has intensified on the
15-floor Civic Centre Towers also in Victoria Island, Lagos.
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