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Exchange office tower eyes partial hotel conversion

Credit Suisse accepts bid to convert 10 floors of spec-built 31-storey tower into a 202-room hotel
office space to a hotel
The historic section of the 31-storey Exchange tower includes a bid to transform it from office space to a hotel. | CHUNG CHOW

 

Credit Suisse’s spec-built $200 million Exchange office tower in downtown Vancouver – now nearly complete and nearly vacant – will see a third of its space converted to a 202-room hotel if it receives city re-zoning approval.

“That could come at any time,” said Mark Chambers, executive vice-president of Jones Lang LaSalle (JLL), the commercial broker on the 369,000-square-foot tower, which was built on the site of the former Vancouver Stock Exchange building at 475 Howe Street. 

The refurbished old exchange building forms the base of the new tower. 

On behalf of the Switzerland-based developer, Iredale Group Architecture submitted a proposal to the City of Vancouver on March 7 to convert the 1929-built heritage section – floors 2 through 11 – from office to hotel uses. 

Approximately 110,000 square feet of office space would be removed from the Class AAA office building to fit in hotel rooms and guest amenities.

The 31-storey Exchange building was the first North American office tower built on speculation by Credit Suisse. When it was conceived four years ago, it was also the first LEED (Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design) Platinum tower in the city and it is still the second-largest LEED Platinum building in Canada.

As part of the  city’s Metro Core Jobs and Economy Land Use Plan at the time, Credit Suisse was allowed density more than two times higher than the original floor-to-space ratio (FSR) zoning on the Howe Street site. The FSR went from 9 FSR to 21.5 FSR. 

The city also waived community amenity costs for new core office buildings. The incentives helped to spur the start of six new downtown office towers with a total of about two million square feet of space.

The Exchange, which completes this year, is the last of that wave. But, while most of the other new office buildings are nearly fully leased, the Exchange still has only one tenant, National Bank, which has taken 45,000 square feet, including street-level retail space.

This is not what the developer expected when the building was announced in August 2013. Agents had predicted it would be fully pre-leased within three years.

Rainer Scherwey, director at Credit Suisse Real Estate Asset Management, noted that the Exchange building was a departure for the global real estate company.

“Normally, we would invest in a fully developed, leased property,” he said during the Exchange launch. “This office tower represents the first time in North America that we are confident enough to build a major project from the ground up.”

“The Exchange missed the wave,” said commercial agent David Thistle, who acted as the broker on the National Bank lease. Thistle said the tower is coming late to the market and the Exchange’s premium lease rates may have slowed pre-leasing action.

Chambers, who took over as the Exchange’s lead leasing agent 18 months ago, said the hotel conversion is not a step back for Credit Suisse, and he expressed confidence that the office tower would eventually reach full occupancy. 

“The Exchange is part of the new wave” of downtown office towers, he said.

Credit Suisse was approached by an unnamed hotel developer and “the pro forma worked out” for the conversion, Chambers added.

The heritage section has lower floor heights and a number of supporting beams that don’t fit well with modern office design, he noted, but make it ideal as a hotel.   

Chambers added that two office tenants are “close to going firm” on a total of 55,000 square feet in the new tower, which will remain exclusively office space.

Pending rezoning, which requires a decision by the city’s director of planning, Chambers would not comment on the name of the hotel operator.

However, hotel developer Executive Group of Companies has recently purchased a site adjacent to the Exchange, at 833 Pender Street.