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Reverse logistics growing concern in industrial CRE

5 years ago

Reverse logistics is a growing concern for retailers and last-mile logistics providers, and the phenomenon is impacting their real estate requirements. The process of receiving and dealing with returns is contributing to already significant demands for light industrial property.

Questions swirl about one of the co-working industry’s giants, but one thing is not in doubt; flexible office workspace has exploded across Canada, quadrupling its footprint since 2014. Space grew by 4.6 million square feet during that time, a CBRE report says.

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WeWork is in talks with banks including JPMorgan to arrange financing that could help the office-sharing company stave off a looming cash crunch. The cash infusion could come in the form of either debt, equity or a combination of both.

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Toronto-based First Capital Realty is looking to add to the growing wave of intensification near Ottawa’s new Confederation Line with a proposal to build a 30-storey mixed-use high-rise next to Blair Station. First Capital Realty owns the nearby Gloucester Centre.

Landmark

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The absence of a station on the vacant Canada Lands Company (CLC) land in Peel will cost up to $ 100 million in royalties for the Metropolitan Express Network (REM), says developer Devimco, which is eager to break ground.

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If Montreal’s public consultation office doesn’t sign off on a plan to build a Major League Baseball stadium in Pointe-St-Charles, it would send the message the city isn’t serious about the sport, Stephen Bronfman said Thursday night.

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Roger Taillibert, the architect who designed Montreal’s Olympic Stadium, has died at the age of 93. The renowned French architect also created the Parc des Princes stadium in Paris and the Khalifa Stadium in Qatar.

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Lowe’s Canada (LOW-N) president Sylvain Prud’homme, also responsible for RONA, announced his retirement on Friday. His departure comes as the U.S. giant home renovation is still trying to revive its activities on Canadian soil.

Pattison ONESTOP

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When Cressey Development Group‘s Hani Lammam looked recently at buying three houses together in East Vancouver for redevelopment into an apartment building, the first question he had was whether the people living in them were owners or tenants.

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American developer Bob Kagan is looking to attract the international buyers who would have previously looked to Vancouver. “There are a lot of international buyers that were buying in Vancouver until they couldn’t really do it anymore . . .”

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Two lawsuits involving a battle over the future of deceased architect Bing Thom’s former company have been filed in B.C. Supreme Court this year. In the latest, Revery Architecture Inc., is taking the famed architect’s widow to court.

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The City of Regina is reminding people and businesses that owe property taxes to pay up or risk losing title of their property. The city will send notices to the owners of 533 properties in tax arrears after Oct. 28.

Ottawa Real Estate Forums

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As it embarks on an ambitious global expansion plan, Ottawa-based Shopify has begun building a team in China, hiring an executive to build partnerships in the world’s largest e-commerce market.

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Stretching 1,765 feet into the sky, CITIC Tower has become the tallest building in Beijing. The tower draws inspiration from the form of the “zun,” a ritual vessel originating in Bronze Age China.

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Lendlease Global Commercial REIT’s stellar IPO debut is yet another testament to the hunger for yield among Asian investors. The REIT started trading on the Singapore bourse Wednesday, surging 6.3 per cent at the open from its offer price.

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The wind whips Lake Ontario – on this cool fall day it’s a dark olive colour – into fat, frothy saw-teeth. The few bundled folks walking toward Ireland Park barely notice the monolithic 1920s Canada Malting silos towering over them.

Matrix360

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The prices of high- and low-rise condominiums have been converging recently in Toronto. Since high-rise condominiums are often smaller, their prices tend to be lower, but the gap has been shrinking primarily because of the increase in high-rise construction costs.

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A new poll from Forum Research shows a vast majority of Toronto residents consider the city to be unaffordable — and they report spending the highest proportion of their income on rent out of Canada’s major cities.

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A Toronto property near Broadview and Danforth Avenues sold for nearly $1.2 million over asking on Wednesday. The four-bedroom house on Playter Boulevard was listed at $2,350,000, but sold for $3,520,000 — nearly a 50 per cent increase.

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The average price of residential homes in Edmonton is continuing to fall, dropping to $351,526 on average, a decrease of 6.06 per cent from $374,219 in September 2018, according to new numbers from the Realtors Association of Edmonton.

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