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Capital property plans scaled back as the credit roof falls in



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Published Date: 04 August 2008
PLANNED property developments in the Capital face being scaled back, delayed or even cancelled as lending continues to dry up, property experts said today.
At least three major office redevelopments have been postponed as company's struggle to secure funding and act with caution about market conditions.

Plans to transform a 1960s office block that used to house the Job Centre on Torphichen Street int
o new environmentally- friendly offices are set to be put off for up to three years.

And redevelopments of nearby Osborne House and Rosebery House are also understood to have been put on hold, despite having won planning consent.

The news comes after plans for new commercial offices on the site of the former Scottish & Newcastle brewery at Fountainbridge were halted last month, with developers understood to be considering whether offices are still right for the site, despite planning permission having already been granted.

Property experts have now claimed more developments are likely to be postponed as the credit crunch continues to bite the industry.

Stewart Taylor, director of CB Richard Ellis' business space consultancy, said: "I think the issue for developers is they're really being hit from all quarters.

"Costs have been going up for some time and many will have bought sites with estimated building costs and will now be facing much higher building costs.

"Yields have moved as well and the straw that broke the camel's back now is that companies are not able to get the lending from the banks."

He added: "I think there will be many other companies in the same position.

"The best buildings in the best locations will still be able to attract funding, but it is slightly different for those in other areas."

The Torphichen Street development would have seen an "eyesore" block replaced with 40,000 square feet of open-plan accommodation with environmentally-friendly features including solar-powered heating and natural ventilation.

Despite the scheme winning approval at a planning committee meeting in April, developer Duddingston House Properties has now put the plan on hold and is to instead lease the existing office space to tenants on a short-term basis.

A final decision on the strategy is due to be made in August but it is expected that work will not begin for three years.

Bruce Hare, chief executive at Duddingston House Properties, said: "I would think that debt funding is very difficult without some form of pre-let.

"We're back to where we were 17 years ago. There's a lack of liquidity from the banks now.

"At least 17 years ago there was liquidity, but there is a banking crisis in terms of funding development work."

It is understood short-term leases have been secured at Osborne House on Osborne Terrace and Rosebery House on Haymarket Terrace despite refurbishment work being due to start.

But developers behind one of the city's largest and most controversial developments said it would still go ahead.

Mark Cummings, a spokesman for Mountgrange, denied there was any prospect of plans for the Caltongate scheme changing.

He said: "There is no potential at all for Caltongate to fall. It has been four years in the making, and subject to planning legislation for three years.

"We have worked hard to make sure it is right for the city."





The full article contains 558 words and appears in Edinburgh Evening News newspaper.
Page 1 of 1

  • Last Updated: 04 August 2008 10:43 AM
  • Source: Edinburgh Evening News
  • Location: Edinburgh
  • Related Topics: Mortgage and property news
 
1

allknowing,

04/08/2008 12:08:55
I just checked the banks websites, and they are now lowering rates. Why this continual mass hesteria, which has resulted in nothing new, the poor still cant afford to buy.
2

Buttress,

04/08/2008 12:14:19
Sorry and all Mark Cummings but Caltongate is a rubbish development completely wrong for the city, with its clone town architecture, and demolitions of historic buildings in the WHS.

Let's hope the credit crunch hits hard at Mountgrange too.

www.eh8.org.uk



3

alex paterson,

edinburgh 04/08/2008 12:35:31
Edinburgh is sinking,spend what you have elsewhere,The Carlops is very nice.
4

aIIknowing,,

04/08/2008 13:05:57
No they can't
5

antifa,

04/08/2008 13:21:26
And allknowing still can't afford reading and writing lessons. Hesteria?
6

antifa,

04/08/2008 13:26:30
By the way, what's going on at Shrub Place and Shrubhill House on Leith Walk? Haven't seen any builders around for months.
7

allknowing,

04/08/2008 13:28:26
#5 the arguement of someone with nothing else to say. I really cant be bothered spell checking every post on this forum. You of course, seem to have plently of time, enjoy.
8

eric,

Lothian 04/08/2008 14:02:45
Be nice to see the tramline joining them.
9

The Judge,

04/08/2008 15:10:38
Thank god we're not relying on housing/office developers contributions to fund the tramLINE. Oh wait a minute...
10

Buttress,

04/08/2008 15:37:43
Is this the same Mark Cummings who is saying:

'Deveron Highland have unveiled a £100 million plan to build 550 homes at Sandown Farm on the outskirts of Nairn, incorporating 138 affordable homes from development partner Servite Housing Association. Work is scheduled to begin next year...

...Batting away media concern over the market downturn Mark Cummings of Deveron Highland said: “We have no concerns in terms of this development in current market conditions.”

"Quite the reverse, we are very positive about it." '

http://www.architecturescotland.co.uk/news/770/Poundbury_redux.html


So - something isn't stacking up is it?






11

Buttress,

04/08/2008 15:43:19
Is this the same Mark Cummings?

'October 23rd 07 It now appears that Director of PPS Scotland Mark Cummings has left the company and Former Labour Council Leader Donald Anderson has replaced him as director'

'Mark Cummings of lobbying company PPS, "before taking charge of the Edinburgh office of PPS, Cummings spent years at the political coalface as a policy analyst in the Scottish Executive and a corporate strategist for Communities Scotland. He also works on behalf of Mountgrange which is developing the controversial Caltongate scheme.'


So can we believe what he tells us, or is it just PR spin?


More:

http://www.eh8.org.uk/mountgrange_s_spin_doctors



12

Buttress,

04/08/2008 15:46:08
'Mark Cummings the Scottish Director of PPS and Mountgrange`s spokesperson for the last two years or so left the company, 2 weeks after the Private Eye story was published in August. Now it appears he is still working for Mountgrange just under his new company name “Invicta” '


'Cummings and goings
Mark Cummings, the spin doctor who left controversial lobbying firm PPS this autumn, has landed a contract with PPS’s most high profile client in Scotland. Cummings worked on the Caltongate development account for PPS, but despite his departure was spotted at a meeting of the Caltongate Liaison Group last week. His new firm, Invicta Public Affairs, has now been taken on by Caltongate’s developer Manish Chande for what Cummings describes as “PR and public affairs, all the usual stuff”. Chande’s firm Mountgrange is expected to retain PPS’s services despite giving Invicta some work on the project.'

Small world, eh?



13

googler,

04/08/2008 20:54:29
"At least three major office redevelopments have been postponed as company's struggle to secure funding and act with caution about market conditions."

At least two pedantic commentators lament the struggle with basic grammar.....
14

,

05/08/2008 02:24:10
Comment Removed By Administrator
Reason:
15

onecoleslaw,

05/08/2008 13:19:21
I really can't believe how anti-development everyone who posts on these forums is.

By the way, shock horror: man who works in property gets another property job.
16

Buttress,

06/08/2008 13:14:38
No, not anti-development - simply anti the wrong developments. Like Caltongate. The one which sill see listed buildings demolished.

Shock horror - he doesn't work in property, He's a PR spin merchant. So can we believe him?

 

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