South Island’s largest office tower up for sale
10 September 2009
South Island’s largest office
tower up for sale
The largest office tower in the South
Island, PricewaterhouseCoopers Centre in Christchurch, is
being put on the market by owners Kiwi Income Property
Trust.
High end CBD property is tightly held in
Christchurch and the last A Grade tower to change hands was
eight years ago. Completed in 1990, long term investor Kiwi
Income Property Trust has owned the PricewaterhouseCoopers
Centre since 1997.
The 21 level Armagh St building
has long been a market leader in the CBD and its position
overlooking the Avon River is considered one of the premium
sites in Christchurch.
Jon Lesquereux, Head of
Transactions & Projects for the Trust, said that the
property had retained its position as Christchurch’s
landmark office tower.
“However, there is now a
desire to re-weight the office portfolio more to the
Auckland and Wellington markets.”
Lesquereux
confirmed that the Trust was maintaining its retail interest
in Christchurch and had no plans to sell Northlands Shopping
Centre.
Office buildings make up 41 per cent of
Kiwi Income Property Trust’s total property
portfolio.
Hamish Doig, managing director of
Colliers International in Christchurch is jointly marketing
the property with Mark Macauley of CB Richard
Ellis.
They are expecting strong international
interest in the site, and said Singaporean investors were
showing renewed interest in the market.
“It’s
certainly true that this is a large investment for the
Christchurch market. But a building of this calibre
doesn’t come along everyday in Christchurch – it’s 12
years since this last changed hands and eight years since
the sale of Forsyth Barr. It is fully leased and the tenants
are high quality with the likes of Beca, Lane Neave, HG
Livingstone and PricewaterhouseCoopers.”
The
building is currently valued at $55.4 million with
indicative rentals for 2010 of $4.7
million.
“With the shortage of A Grade office
space in the Christchurch CBD and limited scope for new
office towers of any note to be built because of
construction costs, this has plenty of investment potential.
The current gap between office rents for existing stock and
getting any traction for a new build makes it prohibitive to
contemplate in the current economic climate,” Doig and
Macauley said.
The PricewaterhouseCoopers Centre
comprises 18 levels of office space, ground floor retail,
two levels of carparking, gymnasium, swimming pool and
sauna. It is for sale by private treaty, closing November
5.
ends