
The city’s outer-borough industrial real estate market, including Brooklyn, continued to show healthy improvement during the second quarter of 2022, according to a new report by Colliers International, a commercial real estate firm with offices in 68 countries.
The report found that the market demonstrated healthy market fundamentals in Q2, as the availability rate continued to decrease. The average asking rent for industrial space in the outer boroughs also increased 2.5 percent as demand for industrial space continues to push asking rents higher. Richard Warshauer, senior managing director for the firm, described the market as “robust.”
The firm, following the CoStar Group, a provider of information, analytics and marketing services to the commercial property industry, divides Brooklyn into two “submarkets,” North Brooklyn and South Brooklyn.
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In North Brooklyn, the rentable building area (RBA) is 42,572,282 square feet, the number of buildings is 741, the availability rate is 3.9 percent, and the average asking rent is $27.01 per square foot. In South Brooklyn, the RBA is 27,849,718 square feet, the number of buildings was 340, the availability rate was 10.4 percent, and the average asking rent was $19.41 per square foot.
Among the areas of Brooklyn with strong industrial real estate activity, said Warshauer, are Red Hook (which has always been strong in industrial real estate), East New York (where there has been a good amount of new construction in recent years), and East Williamsburg, near Newtown Creek.

The Brooklyn Navy Yard, the Brooklyn Army Terminal and Industry City, as the Brooklyn Eagle has often reported, are also very active in attracting and retaining and attracting industrial tenants.
The report spotlights CRBE Investment Management’s acquisition of 640 Columbia Street, a multi-story logistics facility in Red Hook, as “the most notable trade this quarter.” The 397,020-square-foot warehouse was purchased for $330 million, and was fully leased to Amazon at the time of the sale.

The firm also purchased the Brooklyn Logistics Center, two East New York warehouses, for $230 million, which is also leased by Amazon.
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The sales, in tandem with others in Queens and the Bronx, “underscore investor demand for fully-leased warehouse product in the outer boroughs. At $585,10 per square foot, the average sale price was up 44.1 percent year-over-year and is 54.5 percent higher than the five-year quarterly average of $378.78 per square foot,” the report said.












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