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Ljubljana Retail Vacancy/Rental Rates Seen Stable in 2012 as Stozice Opening Looms

 

INTERVIEW – Ljubljana Retail Vacancy/Rental Rates Seen Stable in 2012 as Stozice Opening Looms

LJUBLJANA (Slovenia), October 26 (SeeNews) – Retail property rental and vacancy rates in Ljubljana are expected to remain stable in 2012 as the market braces for the launch of the large-scale Stozice shopping center, the director of specialist real estate advisory firm Slovenia Invest said.

“There is very little vacant space in Ljubljana, with the exception of Stozice, which not all retailers are prepared to commit to, and few outlets have changed hands this year, so rents are stable. We are not expecting any big changes in 2012,” Jacqueline Stuart told SeeNews in an emailed interview.

The anticipated launch of the 58,000 square meter (sq m) underground shopping centre at the Stozice sports complex will have an impact on retail in Ljubljana as it is a very large scheme for a city of 350,000 people, the expert said.

“The success of the project will depend upon the tenant mix and centre management. It will be difficult to compete with nearby BTC City shopping complex that attracts 22 million visitors per year, so they will have to come up with something good.”

Stuart said Stozice was due to open in the fall of 2011, but it was delayed, thought to be due to poor take-up. “The developers changed the leasing agent in June this year and now claim to have 65% leased out.”

Another major retail scheme expected to be delivered in 2012 in Slovenia is the 11,000 sq m Supernova mall in Nova Gorica. The developer, Austria’s M2 Gruppe, is planning a spring launch. “It is already 83% leased out and will bring some welcome quality retail space to the border town, and neighbouring Gorizia in Italy,” Stuart said.

This year only one new scheme will come to market, Mercator Center Maribor, due to open in December. It will provide 18,200 sq m of new retail space in Slovenia’s second largest city, Maribor, anchored by local retailer Mercator’s own grocery outlet.

Commenting on the state of development of other major retail schemes in Slovenia, Stuart said that both Hungary’s Tri Granit, with their Emonika scheme in the country’s capital, and Austria’s SES Spar European Shopping Centers with their Siska Center Ljubljana scheme, have made some progress. “We can look forward to news of delivery dates soon.”

The industrial real estate market is in its infancy in the tiny Alpine state and Slovenia Invest estimates that over 70% of space is owner occupied with no speculative developments. “There is talk of Slovenia becoming a logistics hub for the region. Transport corridors V and X intersect in Ljubljana, and the sea port of Koper is increasingly becoming the gateway to Central and Eastern Europe from the Far East and other markets, but we are yet to see significant demand from occupiers,” Stuart said.

In her view, there are many investment opportunities in Slovenia, but they are generally offered to the market at too early a stage, without proper feasibility studies having been carried out.

The first two quarters of 2011 saw relatively little movement on Ljubljana’s office market, but Stuart said there has been a large increase in enquiries in the third quarter. “Companies have woken up to the fact that they can move to new offices with better parking facilities, lower rent, a rent free period and a free fit out. These are compelling reasons to consider a move.”

The expert anticipates little change in Ljubljana’s office supply in 2012 as all the pipeline projects are currently on hold.

“Vacancy rates will stay more or less the same, at 30%, because although more occupiers will change premises, there will be little additional demand from economic growth or foreign direct investment. We will see a shift of occupiers from outdated office space to new office space. Rental levels in newer space will likely remain stable, but those in outdated space will have to drop significantly as the landlords compete on a shrinking market.”

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