Vacancy rates for office buildings in downtown Ottawa have reached an all-time high, according to a recent report.
Commercial Real Estate Services (CBRE) has been measuring commercial real estate use across the country since 1996.
In a recent report, CBRE found vacancy in downtown Ottawa had jumped from 13.2 per cent in the previous financial quarter to 15.1 per cent in the latest — the city’s highest rate on record.
Louis Karam, managing director of CBRE Ottawa, said the record is noteworthy but not necessarily cause for alarm.
Karam said businesses in the city are still seeing more occupancy than most major Canadian cities.
The report showed Ottawa is below the national average of 18.9 per cent vacancy. Its vacancy rate is also behind Toronto at 15.8 per cent and Calgary at 31.5 per cent.
On a national scale, the report cited a mix of recent economic changes as reasons for why businesses are reducing the size of their downtown offices or commercial footprints.
“Canadian office markets are grappling with a perfect storm of a recession threat, interest rate hikes, tech sector weakness, tenants rightsizing and new supply of office space,” the report read. “All of this is compounded by the continued uncertainty around remote work.”

Ottawa faces unique challenges
While not exempt from those changes, Karam said Ottawa is facing its own unique challenges affecting commercial real estate downtown.
Public Services and Procurement Canada (PSPC), which manages real estate for the federal government and federal agencies, is the largest commercial tenant in Ottawa.
But, Karam said, that may soon change.
“PSPC occupies half of our footprint across our downtown core,” he said. “And they’re looking to reduce [real estate holdings] by 50 per cent.”
In May, PSPC deputy minister Paul Thompson announced a 50 per cent reduction target as part of a 10-year plan, in light of hybrid-work models.
He said the effort will reduce rent expenditures and gather income from sales of existing properties.
But Karam said the reductions will take place over a long period and expects the flagging tech sector to rebound in that time.
Downtown occupancy ‘top priority’
Sueling Ching, president and CEO of the Ottawa Board of Trade, said the board has declared healthy downtown occupancy as a “top priority.”
PSPC’s reductions, Ching said, will have a detrimental effect on a city so reliant on the massive workforce of the federal public service.

“We have created a downtown including the businesses that are down there to support that workforce presence that has not been there since the beginning of the pandemic, and has shown no signs of returning,” she said.
A thriving downtown is a matter of utmost importance to everyone in the Ottawa region, Ching said.
“[Ottawa’s downtown] is important to the social fabric, to the ability to attract visitors and business,” Ching said. “Across the country, together, these large metropolitan areas account for over 60 per cent of our GDP.”
Ching said the Board of Trade is asking for greater transparency and collaboration with the private sector as the public service reduces its footprint.
In the meantime, she’s hopeful about the potential for unused office buildings to be converted to residential spaces. With an ongoing desire to build more housing, Ching said, transforming empty downtown spaces is one of a few short-term solutions she would like to see acted upon quickly.
Karam is also optimistic about mixed-use conversion.
Though it’s not always feasible, he said a recent study of some of the older buildings in Ottawa shows the city has a high potential for converting its office buildings.










