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Microsoft office move sets a rental record



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Published Date: 28 January 2008
COMPUTER giant Microsoft has signed a record lease for a flagship Edinburgh development as part of expansion plans in Scotland, The Scotsman can reveal.
The US firm has agreed a 15-year contract on two floors of Waverley Gate – the city's former General Post Office – which has lain empty for almost three years since it was refurbished.

Microsoft said last night the move signified its commitment
to Scotland and its plans to grow its business here, and hopes the deal will attract more blue-chip companies to the Capital.

Based on the rental values the deal will see Bill Gates' company pay £362,200 per year for part of the prestige building just off Princes Street.

Developers Castlemore said the figure indicated confidence in the commercial property market, despite recent concerns over a slump.

The £100 million energy efficient redevelopment had previously struggled to attract tenants, although the Microsoft brand had been linked with it in recent months. The firm already has an office on George Street, which it moved into in 1998 with 15 employees, a number it planned to double.

Raymond O'Hare, director of Microsoft in Scotland, said: "This is an important move for Microsoft in Scotland.

"Waverley Gate provides exactly the type of high-quality office environment that our customers, business partners and our people deserve.

"This superb facility will provide a great base from which we can continue to grow our Scottish business, and showcase the many ways in which Microsoft can positively impact the Scottish economy and community."

The deal is to lease a total of 12,100sq ft over the top and fourth floors of the landmark building.

The rent comes in at £31 per sq ft for the 3,500 sq ft top floor – a figure developers say is the highest rate in the city – and £29.50 per sq ft for the 8,600 sq ft fourth floor. Previously, the most expensive rent in Edinburgh – and, at the time, Scotland – was paid by Scottish Widows, in 2000 when the fund management firm signed a 20-year deal which set rent at £29 per sq ft of its premises on Morrison Street.

Ben Reed, director with Jones Lang LaSalle Edinburgh, which acted for Microsoft in the deal, said there had been a drop in the available top grade office space in Edinburgh.

But he added that the Microsoft deal would "no doubt assist in attracting other blue-chip organisations to the building".

Nigel Crump of Castlemore, said the presence of the "iconic global brand not only reflects the company's confidence in Waverley Gate, but also Edinburgh and Scotland".

The move follows the relocation of a number of key financial players to Edinburgh's east end, including Citigroup, Baillie Gifford and Edinburgh Fund Managers.

Confirmation of the deal comes as figures show office take-up in Edinburgh has hit a four-year high.



The full article contains 485 words and appears in The Scotsman newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 27 January 2008 9:50 PM
  • Source: The Scotsman
  • Location: Edinburgh
 
1

Ross Fyffe,

Scotland 28/01/2008 00:22:10
Tax write off?
2

S MacLeod,

28/01/2008 01:26:49
If you are a blue-chip company, you may want to take a look to the alternatives before you loose a lot of money by buying into a system which can cause your company serious long term harm.

Just to demonstrate how stupid they are:
http://www.cnet.com/8301-13846_1-9854350-62.html

Always check out the other systems available, there are others which do not have to lie or con people into buying software.

http://www.livingwithoutmicrosoft.org/
http://www.kmfms.com/alternatives.html
http://microsoft.toddverbeek.com/
http://www.openoffice.org/
http://www.lifehack.org/articles/technology/top-10-microsoft-alternatives.html

Bugs and exploits found in open-source software tend to be fixed much faster than in proprietary software.
3

Alasdair,

28/01/2008 08:53:32
I wonder how much council revenue will be lost on the inevitable rates-reduction deal that will have been struck to secure this tenancy?
More or less of our money than the Council wasted to get Harvey Nicks to Edinburgh?
4

D PATERSON AKA ERIC LOTHIANS,

28/01/2008 11:37:05
stop yer moaning, the capital has done well to woo microsoft to scotland
5

Crank Parent,

Livingston 28/01/2008 11:44:11
#2

I agree.

Vista has been such a flop, Microsoft are already working towards the release of the next version of their OS, Windows 7. Most companies are avoiding the upgrade to Vista and are actively looking at alternative platforms (Apple and Linux) to avoid the security and stability issues associated with Windows. The total cost of ownership (specifically support costs) is significantly lower for UNIX based platforms.

Microsoft are on their way out and they are mad if they think Scottish businesses (or education) will continue to be taken in by their marketing machine.

6

ddmc,

28/01/2008 12:09:14
#4 they were already here, this is a sales office.
7

Alasdair,

28/01/2008 14:47:20
#6 - Exactly. The only reason this is a story is because it has been a massive embarrassment that the building has lain empty so long after such a trumpeted redevelopment.
Given that the Hootsmon was predictably one of the loudest trumpeters, it's no surprise that they're glad the space is now filled.

As I mentioned, there will definitely have been sweeteners involved. As usual.
8

That's interesting, but ...,

Edinburgh 28/01/2008 16:08:47
#5 "Vista has been such a flop" - brilliant. Were you aware that sales of the Operating System topped 100 million this month (after just over 1 year)? I'd think Apple wouldn't consider Leopard sales a flop if they were hitting those sorts of figures. I think you'll find most vendors working on the next version of a release - it's called development :).

"The total cost of ownership (specifically support costs) is significantly lower for UNIX based platforms" - an interesting theory, but unfortunately a number of independent studies don't quite agree.

I think it is great news for both IT and businesses in Scotland (and particularly Edinburgh), and wish some people would grow up when it comes to the Open Source debate (no numbers mentioned). Competition drives innovation, especially in technology - recognise and embrace that fact!
9

TimW1234,

Ottawa, Canada 28/01/2008 16:21:45
There was a previous article on "Imagine a World WIthout Lawyers". If only we could have a world without Microsoft and all that it stands for.
10

Crank Parent,

Livingston 28/01/2008 20:18:31
#8 I hope you're not an IT Consultant. If you are, I take pity on any business you give advice too.

Apple sold 2 million copies of Leopard in the first 2 days after it went on sale. Microsoft sold around 500,000 copies in the same period. Most sales of Vista have been OEM copies of Home Basic included on new PCs (a great many of which have been downgraded to XP or had Linux installed on them instead). Very few people have upgraded their existing machines to Vista and businesses have demanded the continued sale of machines with XP much to the embarrassment of Microsoft who intended to discontinue it last year. They are so desperate to get people to buy Vista they have recently relented and now allow Mac and Linux users to run the cheaper versions of Vista under virtualisation (i.e Parallels, VMware and Xen).
11

Duncan in Edinburgh,

28/01/2008 20:21:25
#8 Haha! Point me at a single "independent" study that doesn't agree.
12

Martyk,

sussex 28/01/2008 23:33:19
Er. Microsoft hope to double the numbers employed from 15 to 30 ! They employ 1,200 in Dublin. And announced a new $500 million investment there before Christmas. Lets get real people.It is a sales office. Nothing more.
13

That's interesting, but ...,

Edinburgh 29/01/2008 07:53:08
From a Gartner report ...

"Enterprises that want to migrate their desktop computers to the Linux operating system (OS) must first weigh several factors that go beyond Linux hype, myths and anti-Microsoft sentiment. These factors include the composition of your application portfolio, the requirements of your users and the all-important migration cost and return on migration investment. Spending money on a massive migration that won't show a return on investment (ROI) within two to three years *usually does not make sense*."

- I hope you're not an IT consultant.

... and #12, it was 15 employees in 1998, when Microsoft moved to their current offices. It's considerably more than that now, though I don't know the exact numebers. I do know that there are a number of departments in the current office, inlcuding Sales (shocker), Support, and Consulting.

Cheer up people, would you rather have an empty building in the centre of Edinburgh or a real demontration of investment in the capital?
14

S MacLeod,

29/01/2008 09:13:35
The text from the Gartner report is meaningless in the context of this thread.
15

S MacLeod,

29/01/2008 10:00:29
"Cheer up people, would you rather have an empty building in the centre of Edinburgh"

yes.

It would be better than getting robbed and lied to by a company who has a proven track record of shafting other companies, stealing, lies, and interfearing in politics and other countries to the detriment of many.

 

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