Wednesday, 1 June 2011

Small is beautiful

Apart from a shortage of prime offices, industrial property is also under increasing pressure because of a lack of new speculative schemes. The most acute problems are in the smaller and medium sized units because the big shed market is now quiet. “Demand in the smaller end is there but there is a requirement for more units up to 2,787 sq.metres (30,000 sq.ft.),“ said Alan Gilkison of Ryden.

One of the problems is the difficulty of prising funding out of banks, he added, noting the fact that demand from manufacturing companies has become more prevalent. Gilkison quoted the example of two engineering companies who have brought production back from the Far East to Glasgow because of the need to improve quality.

One scheme that caters for current demand is at Clyde Gateway East, a development of three units totalling 5,620 sq.metres (60,500 sq.ft.) At Bathgate, J Smart has bought a 6.05 acre site close to Junction 3A of the M8 motorway from Scottish Enterprise to build 4,665 sq.metres (50,218 sq.ft.) of distribution, business and warehouse space.

Bryce Stewart of Colliers International, joint letting agent with Ryden, said: “There is increasing activity in the smaller sized market, with the industrial sector currently more robust thanothers.” One manufacturing company expanding in Scotland is Rearo Laminates which has opened a new 1,022 sq.metres (11,000 sq.ft.) plant in Govan. In addition it has opened a new depot on the Longman Industrial Estate, Inverness, complementing existing outlets at Rosyth, Glasgow and Tyne & Wear.

Rearo’s Graham Mercer said: “In addition to the Inverness depot, an opportunity arose to expand our manufacturing business within Glasgow and the property at Drumoyne Road will allow us to do this fairly readily with little or no disruption to our production lines and, as importantly, our staff.”

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