Real estate developers say homelessness, drugs hinder downtown London's full-scale revival - Action News
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Real estate developers say homelessness, drugs hinder downtown London's full-scale revival

Real estate developers say homelessness, drugs and a lack of permanent parking is holding back the full-scale revival of downtown London by making it a hard sell for prospective office tenants as the core looks to turn the corner after the COVID-19 pandemic.

Downtownwas long the beating heart of London, until COVID-19 upended everything

an empty office building
A banner advertises empty office space on the Market Tower building in the heart of the city, a place once teeming with office workers that now stands empty. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

Real estate developers say homelessness, drugs and the prevalence of people suffering from severe mental illness is holding back the full-scale revival of downtown London by making it a hard sell for prospective office tenants as the core looks to turn the corner after the COVID-19 pandemic.

The downtownhaslong been the beating heart of London, Ont., where street life moved to the pulse of rush hour trafficand the nine-to-five crowd, whose rhythms made theneighbourhood's tangle of offices, shops and restaurantsteem with life for 10 hours a day, five days a week.

But thenthe virus upended everything, throwing off the core's rhythmandgutting its office sector whenremote work suddenly replaced the commute, acceleratingthedecadeslong flight of office workers to the suburbs while doubling the city's homeless population.

Since the virus peaked, the downtown still bears the scars.Empty offices and shops are hidden behind colourfully-painted plywood facadespublic art that stands in sharp contrast to thenearby scenes of urban squalorwhere theunsheltered and the drug-addled lie slumped in the streets as passersby pretend not to notice.

Social problemsanuncomfortable topic, says realtor

"It is probably the biggest issue that people don't like to talk about. They don't like to make themselves seem as though they're insensitive to what's happening to these people,but that is it," said Roger Caranci,a commercial realtor and former veteran city councillor

A homeless man tries to take shelter from the midday July sun in a doorway in downtown London, Ont., as a passerby walks past on Dundas near Richmond.
A homeless man tries to take shelter from the midday July sun in a doorway in downtown London, Ont., as a passerby walks past on Dundas near Richmond. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

Carancisaid the homelessness, drugs and severe mental illness that often comes with themisa deal-breaker for many of the clients he's looking to court.

Just two months ago,Caranci recalls a client who wasinterested in a long-term lease and said they had to take a pass after they got an eyefulof London's rampant social problems.

"They said to me, 'You know what?As much as the building fulfills our needs, as much as it's the perfect spot, we don't want to rent here because of this.'"

empty storefronts
Brightly painted plywood boards are a common sight in downtown London where landlords have tried to make empty buildings look more presentable as the city tries to gentrify its downtown. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

Farhi Holdings Corporation owns, by far, the largest share of downtown London's empty buildings at 60 per cent.

Shmuel Farhi, the company's president, wrote in an email to CBC News, citing"socio-economic issues" as well as"drug use and crime" as what he sees as thebiggest reasons for the downtown's high commercial vacancy rate, and what he called a comparatively "healthy" vacancy rate of seven per cent in the city's suburbs, which he blamed for the"cannibalization of the core."

"The suburban office market isn't constrained by the same issues facing our downtown," he wrote. "We have seen over 2,000,000 square feet of commercial tenancy flee from downtown to failed big box retail centres, indoor malls, strip plazas and new design-built offices in the suburbs."

City spent millions to fill the void

In an attempt to fill the void, the city has spent hundreds of millions of dollars on better infrastructure,connecting cultural attractionssuch as Museum London, Budweiser Gardens and the central branch of the London Public Library and filling empty land withgleaming new residential towers risingabove the gritty 19th and 20th century storefronts.

street scene at Dundas and Richmond
The city has spent millions improving infrastructure like Dundas Place, seen here, and by bringing in new residential life in the form of gleaming new residential highrises towering over the old 19th and 20th century storefronts. (Colin Butler/CBC News)

The efforts seem to be paying off. The neighbourhood was the fastest-growing in London at the time of the 2021 census, but despite new developments and a stronger downtown police presence, the problems of homelessness and drugs persist.

Adding to the problem are Canada's still rising interest rates, which, on top of remote work, have dealt a double blow to the city's office sector, making the languishing problem even harder to solve.

"After COVID, those prospects are fewer and far between," saidKapil Lakhotia, the CEO of the London Economic Development Corporation, adding that homelessness and crime aren't the only factors that could discourage new tenants from coming to the city.

"It's never one thing in isolation," he said. "There are a number of different things that they could be evaluating,parking is one of them, their hours of operation and number of in-person and hybrid employees. So companies across Canada are doing this."

As interest rates rise amid an office sector mentality of shrinking footprints, it could signal a dim future for the city centre, which is also a pillar of the city's economy.

It's why London Mayor Josh Morgan said the city is encouraging core development away from the office monoculture and toward more of a mixed-use core that's residential-friendly.

"We need lots and lots of people living downtown," he said. "If you create a self-sufficient system where people can walk out their front door, they can support those local businesses themselves.

"Often we get fascinated with 'how do we get someone way out in the suburbs to come downtown.' We don't have to do that if we have people living downtown every single day."