Cheapest industrial rents in Australia in Melbourne's west and north

Cheapest industrial rents in Australia in Melbourne's west and north
Katherine JimenezDecember 7, 2020

Melbourne's key western and northern suburban industrial markets have been identified as the cheapest on a rental basis in Australia. 

Data collected by Savills Australia showed that in the period to December 2013, there was a wide gap in net effective rents between the key industrial markets nationally, with rents in Melbourne at least 31% and up to 35% lower than those in Adelaide, Brisbane, Perth and Sydney.    

Savills national head of research Tony Crabb said the lower rentals were a key factor in decisions taken by both national and international corporations to locate their distribution centres in Melbourne.

He said three or four key factors mainly dominated the thinking of corporates when taking those important decisions - access to ports and airports, access to freeways, access to local markets and rentals. 

"Should all of the access criteria be equal then Melbourne rentals offer a significant cost advantage", said Crabb. "When you’re talking an average 30,000 square metre plus national distribution centre then rental savings alone can be in the order of $1 million per annum." 

Such is the interest, Savills estimates that it has received an average 250,000 to 350,000 square metres of enquiry from national and international companies seeking major distribution facilities over the past 12 months. 

Savills head of industrial Victoria, Greg Jensz said "the rent doesn’t always prove decisive but it definitely puts Melbourne in a very strong position before other factors are considered".

He said that road transport infrastructure and plans to further enhance that infrastructure also played a pivotal role in the Melbourne market’s national pre-eminence. Congested roads meant longer delivery times, greater fuel costs, and delays in delivery to clients, he added.

He also makes a point of saying that "40% of Australia’s container shipping travels through the Port of Melbourne and that is because the bulk of Australia’s national distribution centres are located here. That is no accident," Jensz said.

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