Leeds residential market bouncing back?
According
to new research compiled by the University of Leeds and property agents
operating in the Leeds city centre market – Knight Frank, Morgans City Living,
King Sturge, Savills and Allsop - the Leeds market is starting to see a revival.
The research shows
that the
rental market has remained
strong during the recession. The properties managed by six major firms of agents
total 3153 apartments and these are more than 92% occupied. Only one scheme is
entirely vacant (Waterside, the second phase of City Island),
though the investors have recently indicated that the building will be let over
the next few months.
Sale values dipped from the fourth quarter
of 2007 but stabilised during 2009. The dip was less severe in good quality and
/ or well-located schemes such as One
Brewery Wharf,
1 Dock Street,
The Gateway and Langton’s Wharf (where some values actually rose).
Rents have stayed at more or less
the same level as they were in 2007, with some high quality, well-located
schemes showing some rental growth. Some building owners are letting apartments
for the medium term with a view to later sale when values recover.
Rachael
Unsworth, University
of Leeds, commented: “The
research reveals that the market has contradictory features: there are high levels of occupancy in city centre apartments, yet development is
at a standstill”.
Guy Ackernley, partner, King Sturge,
commented: “This
report has underpinned the reality behind the Leeds
city centre market. Quality developments in good locations are still in demand
for both sales and lettings. Poor quality schemes built in peripheral locations
have suffered and there is little development likely to happen in the next five
years. All in all the city's residential market is in a much better state than
many believe."
Only two schemes are
under
construction – Indigo Blu and Saxton – and only five schemes, totalling
around 600-700 flats, seem to have a chance of delivering within the next 5
years.
More than 30 schemes with
planning permission, totalling over 9,920 units,
have stalled and seem unlikely to
proceed in the originally proposed form. Many more sites are still at
pre-application stage and are even more unlikely to come to fruition in the
form originally indicated.
Funding for large-scale apartment
blocks is highly unlikely to return within 3 to 5 years. The viability of
schemes is no longer underpinned by off-plan sales. Once conditions do improve,
we expect to see growing numbers of owner occupiers. Of those buying as
investors, most will choose apartments with a tenant already in place.
Land values are now much lower than the
prices paid during the boom. This value gap has paralysed the development
pipeline.
The
public and private
sectors need to work together to identify the areas of the city
centre/fringes that are most likely to be attractive to occupiers and investors
and co-ordinate the phasing of development plus physical, social and retail
infrastructure and public realm improvements to maximise the chance of creating
confidence and viability. East Bank and the Aire Valley,
Holbeck and Beeston are likely starting points.
Newly worked proposals need to
feature
varied home types, including some family houses, in order to
meet demand.
Leeds remains an attractive option for occupiers, and
investment
in retail, leisure and other facilities continues to improve.
Rachael Unsworth, University of Leeds,
concluded: “This collaborative survey corrects some misapprehensions about
the Leeds market. There has been great co-operation between the
agents in drawing together the evidence and interpreting it. Now there should be co-operation between the
public and private sectors to ensure that the next phase of development is as
coherent as possible, creating environmentally-sound buildings in pleasant
settings which appeal to occupiers for the longer term.”
To download the full publication please click hereFor further information please contact:
Guy Ackernley, Partner, King Sturge LLP, +44
(0) 113 205 3340
Rachael Unsworth, Lecturer, School of Geography,
University of Leeds, +44 (0) 7712 739 153