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Alberta slump cited in court process to sell dozens of office buildings

The Calgary Tower reflected on office building windows in downtown Calgary, Alberta on Dec. 22, 2014. THE CANADIAN PRESS IMAGES/Larry MacDougal

CALGARY — A major player in Calgary’s depressed office real estate industry is putting dozens of Alberta office buildings under court protection from creditors while it tries to sell them.

Riaz Mamdani, CEO of Strategic Group, said the move is being made because of a prolonged downturn in the Alberta economy over the past five years that has resulted in office vacancy rates of around 25 per cent in Calgary, Canada’s major oil and gas hub.

The company said it has lost 78 tenants — some of which are no longer in business — occupying almost 54,000 square metres under lease since mid-2014 and the situation is expected to worsen in 2020.

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The Alberta Court of Queen’s Bench has appointed Hardie & Kelly Inc. as monitor of proceedings under the Companies’ Creditors Arrangement Act for 50 properties in Calgary and six in Edmonton.

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Mamdani said the proceedings will not affect the rest of the private company’s 171 office, retail and apartment properties from Vancouver Island to Atlantic Canada.

In its third-quarter office market report, realtor Avison Young said the overall Calgary vacancy rate was 22.3 per cent but the downtown rate was 24.6 per cent.

“The end goal is to make sure that all of the lenders and creditors are fully paid and that there’s a portfolio left at the end of it that’s a viable portfolio in this current economy,” said Mamdani in an interview.

The company said the affected properties in Calgary represent about five per cent of total Beltline and downtown Class B and C office space and about seven per cent of Class A suburban space.

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