
Christine Eade
Christine is a former features correspondent for Property Week
Contact info
- Tel:
- +44 (0)7432 612 304
- Mobile:
- 07432 612 304
- Email:
- eadechristine@gmail.com
- Markets
Tight supply forces developers to embark on office refurbishments
The central south coast region is undergoing a major transformation, with significant public and private sector investment in new amenities and mixed-use commercial development.
- Markets
New lab space falls short of occupier need in Oxfordshire
The demand for laboratory space in Oxfordshire is so great that the owners of the county’s two most prominent science parks are both on site with speculative developments.
- Markets
Bristol’s office market shows signs of revival
When two of Bristol’s most successful developers, Salmon and Cubex, revealed last year that they were considering building more offices in the city, it came as a relief to those who feared that Bristol was running out of office space.
- Markets
The challenge of developing in Oxford
Oxford is lacking in offices, affordable housing and a modern retail offer - a situation not helped by the city’s strict planning restrictions, which can make new development tough to deliver.
- Markets
New science park could be good news for Reading
Over the past few decades, the Thames Valley has established itself as a hotbed of pharmaceutical science, but while office space to house pharma firms is bountiful, laboratories have been hard to come by.
- Markets
Government 'hub' search gives Cardiff a boost
Cardiff’s office market has received a boost from a new UK government requirement that could total as much as 465,000 sq ft in the city, as part of plans to develop regional hubs.
- Markets
Industrial-strength supply problem for Hampshire
Calls from agents lobbying for the allocation of land for distribution facilities have fallen on deaf ears in Hampshire.
- Markets
More homes and offices needed in city of academic excellence
Cambridge has always been a draw for students, residents, workers and tourists alike.
- Markets
By hook or by Crook: Ressance presses ahead in Newbury
Developer Ressance has been fighting to bring Newbury’s Faraday Plaza to life for 12 years.
- Markets
Could the Cardiff skyline be about to change?
The Cardiff office market is experiencing a renaissance.
- Markets
Decision time for business park owners
This year could see the beginning of a transformation of a clutch of business, science and industrial parks that form an arc to the north west of London from Oxford to Bedford.
- Markets
Ashford council looks to kick-start development
No one can recall when the last speculative office was built in Ashford.
- Markets
What’s in store for the Friary shopping centre?
It will be fifth time lucky if M&G Real Estate turns Guildford bus station into an extension of its Friary shopping centre - a project that has defeated four other developers.
- Markets
Discovery Park duo have site regeneration down to a science
In November last year, Property Week revealed that regeneration specialists Trevor Cartner and Chris Musgrave had bought the 19.3-acre Fawdon pharmaceutical site in Newcastle from French global healthcare firm Sanofi, which had moved operations overseas with the loss of around 450 jobs.
- Markets
Going coastal: seaside town looks to prove it is no one-trick pony
A whole day out in South Shields - that is the joint ambition of Muse Developments and South Tyneside Council.
- Markets
RAF bases to become local problem after US exodus
In 2019, the Royal Air Force (RAF) will have a major problem on its hands.
- Markets
South East office refurbs are offering developers a quick fix
Two of the dominant business parks in the four southern counties are to come under new ownership in deals that again demonstrate the strength of the South East office park market.
- Markets
Can Oxford get development activity back on track?
On Monday (26 October), Chiltern Railways will open Oxford Parkway station, linking north Oxford with London Marylebone in 58 minutes.
- Online
RESI 2015: Plan in advance to find land for homes, senior director says
Dealing with surplus land feels “too sequential,” according to Richard McCarthy, executive director central government for Capita.