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Texas  + Office  | 

Houston Office Vacancies Rise on Negative Absorption

The exact numbers may vary, but second-quarter Houston office reports from NAI Partners, Madison Marquette and Colliers International are in general agreement: vacancies are rising, driven by negative absorption.

NAI Partners reports Q2 vacancies at 23.1% for Class A properties and 22.7% for Class B, with negative absorption of 852,000 square feet.

Madison Marquette’s measuring stick puts the market’s direct vacancy at 20.8%, a 30-year high, with 807,000 square feet of negative absorption.

By Colliers’ reckoning, net negative absorption of 513,316 square feet pushed vacancies up by 40 basis points to 20.5%. The report says leasing activity declined by 35% from Q1.

That being the case, Colliers’ Patrick Duffy notes, “As we begin the third quarter, we have seen an increase in activity from potential office users in pursuing new leases” following the initial shock and some “wait and see” delays.

Madison Marquette says the biggest potential impact on Houston offices will be “how businesses will respond to the massive natural experiment of working from home.”

For comments, questions or concerns, please contact Paul Bubny

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About Paul Bubny

Paul Bubny serves as Senior Content Director for Connect Commercial Real Estate, a role to which he brings 16-plus years’ experience covering the commercial real estate industry and 30-plus years in business-to-business journalism. In this capacity, he oversees daily operations while also reporting on both local/regional markets and national trends, covering individual transactions across all property types, as well as delving into broader subject matter. He produces 7-10 daily news stories per day and works with the Connect team and clients to develop longer-form content, ranging from Q&As to thought-leadership pieces. Prior to joining Connect, Paul was Managing Editor for both Real Estate Forum and GlobeSt.com at American Lawyer Media, where he oversaw operations at both publications while also producing daily news and feature-length articles. His tenure in B2B publishing stretches back into the print era, and he has served as Editor in Chief on four national trade publications. Since 1999, Paul has volunteered as the newsletter editor of passenger rail advocacy groups (one national, one local).

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