The office market is slowly recovering from a deep depression. Managers are looking to more modern workplaces not only to meet future sustainability requirements, but also to entice employees from their homes back into the workplace. Škoda Auto recently moved to new offices, large media houses are changing their addresses, and Česká spořitelna, for example, is already looking at a modern building in Smíchov. Some authorities and public institutions are also looking for a new seat. However, many companies prefer the reconstruction of existing buildings.
Prague will buy the company VN 42, which owns an office building on the corner of Wenceslas Square and Štěpánská Street, from Komerční banka (KB) for approximately 3.5 billion crowns. The city councilors approved it. The municipality plans to move officials from the Škoda Palace in Jungmannova street to the building, where it is leased until the end of March 2028.
Despite the current weakening of the investment activity in the Central and Eastern European region (CEE) volumes of investment in commercial real estate in the Czech Republic in the first quarter of 2024 recorded a year -on -year increase of 36 %. In total, in this period, capital was invested in the volume of EUR 545 million, dominated mainly by local investors. The yields did not notice any significant movement compared to the previous quarter. According to Colliers' estimates, a leading provider of diversified professional services in the field of commercial real estate and investment administration, the total volume of transactions in 2024 should reach EUR 1.4 billion. This would mean the end of the three -year decline period and the hope that the Czech real estate investment market is reflected from the bottom.
The market for modern office space in Prague at the end of the 1st quarter of 2024 amounted to approximately 3.91 million m2. The vacancy rate increased slightly to 7.5%, representing approximately 292,000 m2 of vacant office space available for immediate lease. After a long period of inactivity, new speculative construction is now slowly starting to thaw. And despite the long-term growth of rents, Prague remains an attractive and competitive location attracting new investors. This is according to the regular quarterly survey of the office real estate market published by Colliers, a leading provider of diversified professional services in the field of commercial real estate and investment management.
After moving from Žižkov at the end of last year, the National Film Archive (NFA) settled in Nuslí. The company Profil Nábytek in tandem with the architectural studio Schwestern created an attractive working environment for employees in the building near Botič, opposite the Theater Na Fidlovačka. The uniqueness of the new interiors lies, among other things, in the fact that if NFA moves again in the future, the modular furniture can continue to be used according to needs and current dispositions.
The Dornych project of the Crestyl Group, which will replace the old shopping center in the neighborhood of the Brno Central Station in the coming years, will also offer a hotel. The Leonardo Hotels network will strengthen its presence in the Czech Republic with the opening of a new lifestyle hotel, NYX Hotel Brno by Leonardo Hotels. It will open in mid-2028 and will be the group's second hotel in the Czech Republic after NYX Hotel Praha, which opened in 2017. The Dornych project will offer a freely accessible public space flanked by several smaller buildings. The lower floors of the new buildings will be reserved for shops and services, while the upper floors will house rental housing and offices in addition to the aforementioned hotel. One of the buildings will be occupied by the EUC clinic.
Pátek 19. dubna se už navždy stane výjimečným dnem pro všechny pracovníky rádia Evropa 2. To totiž právě do pátku sídlilo na adrese ulice Wenzigova 4 v Praze 2.
This year, the city of Ostrava completed the preparation of a new strategic plan for the development of Ostrava with a view to 2030. The main vision is fundamentally unchanged compared to the previous plans. The efforts to connect the city internally and with the world and the revival of the historic core remain among the priorities. Closely related to this is the construction of new buildings that Ostrava will be proud of and which in a wider context will benefit the general public. However, the local government cannot satisfy such construction alone. Therefore, private investors become important drivers of urban development. Only an open and cooperative approach from both sides has the potential to meaningfully develop the city - with ecologically sustainable construction and valuable architecture.
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