London,
07
August
2019
|
11:47
Europe/London

London tops flexible office offering across Europe

  • London ranks first in Europe for size and share of flexible office stock
  • Flexible space provision growing across European markets
  • London experiencing strong corporate demand for flexible space

 

London, 6 August 2019 – Research conducted by CBRE showed that London’s flexible office stock amounted to over 1.1 million square metres, representing over 5% of the city’s total office stock. This places London firmly top of the table, when compared to other major cities across Europe.

The next closest city in Europe in terms of amount of space is Paris, offering 439,000 square metres, equivalent to around 0.8% of total Paris office stock. In terms of the overall market contribution of flexible space, Amsterdam came closest to London with around 290,000 square metres, equivalent to 4.5% of the Amsterdam office stock. This is one of several examples of European cities that have seen rapid recent growth in the stock of flexible space.

The research looked at the ten largest cities across Europe in terms of total amount of space flexible space on offer and its percentage share of the commercial office sector as a whole. Flexible offices are increasingly used by corporates as a means of attracting and retaining talent in a tight labour market. Companies are also increasingly using flexible space to test alternative occupancy models, which is fuelling demand.

City

Flexible Office Stock, SQ M

Flexible Office Stock as % of Total Office Stock

London

1,161,886 Sq M

5.50%

Paris

439,876 Sq M

0.80%

Berlin

306,419 Sq M

1.70%

Amsterdam

289,357 Sq M

4.50%

Munich

237,609 Sq M

1.10%

Hamburg

150,695 Sq M

1.10%

Moscow

145,551 Sq M

0.90%

Frankfurt

125,208 Sq M

1.10%

Madrid

124,666 Sq M

1.00%

Barcelona

95,381 Sq M

1.60%

Vienna

79,800 Sq M

0.70%

Source: CBRE Flex Stock: City Overview

Richard Holberton, Head of EMEA occupier research at CBRE
Corporate appetite for flexible space continues to strengthen and, as a result, the stock of flexible offices is expanding across a number of major European cities. Nonetheless, as these figures show, London commands a position of dominance and relative maturity, and is the major player in Europe when it comes to flexible working.
Richard Holberton, Head of EMEA occupier research at CBRE
Stewart Smith, Managing Director, Central London A&T, Occupier
Whilst the demand for space from operators seems to continue unabated, what remains clear is how the use of Flex or Coworking space is rapidly rising up the corporate agenda. This is frequently driven by the desire of business to disrupt their own enterprise as well as being a strategy to aid in attracting the increasingly important digital talent pool. This demand will continue to drive transactions of increasing scale.
Stewart Smith, Managing Director, Central London A&T, Occupier