CBD office vacancy rate rises
The opening of a 41-storey office tower in the Brisbane CBD has impacted on the vacancy rate but demand remains strong.
The opening of a 41-storey office tower in the Brisbane CBD has impacted on the vacancy rate but demand remains strong.
A large site in Brisbane’s northern suburbs for which a developer won approval for an innovative “cradle to grave” project is being sold, and its future is far from clear.
Cashed up investors who want a safe haven for their savings are spending millions on quality assets without having stepped through the front door.
An award-winning brewer is set to add plenty of fizz, as well as a 300-seat farm-to-table restaurant, to a heritage-listed property that will be part of a major entertainment precinct on Brisbane’s southside.
With the vacancy rate tightening in the inner city a developer will lodge plans for a new office building with a special green feature.
A ‘lower for longer’ interest rate environment is convincing investors to snap up quality retail properties for higher prices and tighter yields.
One of Brisbane’s oldest pubs – a three-storey Victorian-era beauty that’s loved by locals in this inner-city suburb – has been put on the market by receivers and managers.
Two experienced agents return to their old jobs, Virgin Australia produces a shortlist for their new home and Urbis moves into its plush new office.
An inner Brisbane neighbourhood marketplace with an IGA supermarket has been sold for $15 million after attracting more than 10 offers.
A refurbished shopping centre is 90 per cent occupied after welcoming two new tenants including a tradie-based tool retailer
Original URL: https://www.couriermail.com.au/journalists/chris-herde/page/145