03-01-15 9:52 pm – Source: Het Parool
Rush hour in the Leidsestraat © Reuters
Rokin and Leidsestraat belong to the Dutch streets where the shop rent in 2014 is most increased. In prime locations managed shopping to evade the steadily declining price trend. According to a survey of real estate consultant Jones Lang LaSalle.
Average fell rent of shops in the Netherlands with 2.52 percent. Rokin put there an increase of 24 percent compared to. It is the fifth consecutive year that the decline shop rents. The decline is attributed to the still sluggish consumer spending. The rise of online stores retail companies plays tricks.
The real estate advisor signals a decline in demand for so-called A1 retail space, involving buildings in the best shopping streets of a city. This trend is particularly in small and medium cities in areas with a dwindling population in Overijssel, Friesland, Drenthe, Zeeland and Limburg, but also large cities are increasingly confronted with this development.
Only the absolute top of the shopping goes against this trend. Rokin takes the cake with a rent increase of 24 percent in 2014 to 1150 euros per square meter per year. This increase is attributed to the crowds in the Kalverstraat, where some of the shoppers on the way branches off to the Rokin. There is also the prospect of the Metro as the North / South line will move in 2017 and the arrival of Marks & amp; Spencer.
2950 euros in the Kalverstraat
In this list ends Leidsestraat in third place with an increase of ten percent to 2,250 euros, behind the Maastrichterbrugstraat (1200 euro ). Thus the rent, there is still far behind the Kalverstraat, which 2950 euros absolute topwinkellocatie of the Netherlands. The differences between the top, which benefits from the presence of international chains, and shopping in the periphery are getting bigger and bigger.
This appears according to Jones Lang LaSalle clear from the annual survey covered 75 municipalities and 185 shopping areas are analyzed. Total has risen in 18 of the 185 shopping the rent. Kalverstraat is followed at a distance by the Beursplein in Rotterdam (1800 euros per square meter per year) and the Great State Maastricht (1650 euros). The Utrecht Lange Elisabethstraat is 1650 euros next on the list, followed by the Spuistraat in The Hague (1400 euros) and Demer in Eindhoven (1400 euros)
(By: Editors).
No comments:
Post a Comment