All Property Week articles in Offices Supplement June 2004
View all stories from this issue.
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Markets
South-west and wales
Government agencies have kept the south-west's property scene afloat but rents have stagnated
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Markets
South-east
Tenants are still in the driving seat but developers are on the hunt for cheap stock in the stormy south-east
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Markets
A royal time of it
The Royals: is it east London's answer to Chiswick Park or an untested location that will take years to let? Development Securities, developer of the business park (left) in London's Royal Albert Docks, hopes this week's completion of its first speculative phase will silence its doubters.
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Markets
The power of two
Plantation Place may not include the tallest towers in the City but British Land hopes Arup Associates' innovative design will put rival office schemes in the shade.
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Markets
North-west
The region's office market looks set to brighten up as speculative and regeneration projects take off
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Markets
Mixed use will save
The last couple of years have been challenging for the property industry, most notably in the office sector.
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Markets
Wanted: new lease of life
Stockley Park celebrates its 18th birthday this week but with half the business park's space now vacant, investors that own offices there are pinning their hopes on updated designs to increase their chances of signing tenants.
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Markets
It's in the post
Scotland's largest speculative office building has entered its final phase of construction. Waverley Gate, a £60m development near Edinburgh's Waverley Station by Castlemore Securities (left), is on target for completion in December.
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Markets
History repeats itself
An upturn in London's West End agency business is showing all the signs of following a pattern that was set in the late 1990s
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Markets
Faded star
Stockley Park has led the business parks sector for years but few champagne corks will be popping to commemorate its 18th birthday as it approaches a 50% vacancy rate.
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Markets
Central london
Strong signs of recovery in central London should not mask the enduring problems of supply