Thursday, June 11, 2026
Wednesday, June 10, 2026
Smaller lease deals drive Central Pennsylvania’s core industrial market
By Brenda Nguyen CoStar Analytics
Industrial space availability trends across South Central Pennsylvania— spanning Harrisburg, Lancaster, York, Reading, Lebanon and Gettysburg—reveal a growing disconnect between development patterns and tenant demand.
Developers continue to build big facilities geared for single users, but tenants are leasing small-bay facilities, creating uneven market conditions across building size segments.
Small-bay industrial properties, those measuring under 50,000 square feet, remain the most in-demand segment, with availability holding near 3.5% in 2026. Industrial buildings measuring between 50,000 and 100,000 square feet also show tight conditions, with availability at 4.5%. Limited new construction in these two size categories, combined with steady demand from local and regional users, continues to support lower vacancy rates.
Over the past three years, approximately 530 industrial leases were signed in this six-county region, with 88%, or about 470 leases, signed for spaces smaller than 100,000 square feet. This sustained demand has kept vacancy compressed in smaller formats, even as overall supply has expanded.
Availability rises sharply with building size. Mid-sized industrial properties, those between 100,000 and 249,999 square feet, have availability above 10%, while availability in buildings between 250,000 and 499,999 square feet has reached approximately 12.3%.
Buildings larger than 500,000 square feet now have the most availability, at roughly 13.7% in mid-2026, surpassing the 250,000 to 499,999 square foot segment in recent quarters.
Although large leases often dominate headlines, they account for a small share of actual demand. Over the same three-year period, only 13 leases, about 2.5% of total transactions, exceeded 500,000 square feet. These large-block leases tend to occur irregularly, creating sharp swings in vacancy when they are signed or when a building in this size quotient is delivered vacant.
York emerges as South-Central Pennsylvania’s fastest-growing industrial hub
Tuesday, June 9, 2026
Monday, June 8, 2026
Thursday, June 4, 2026
Vanguard deepens nationwide push to slash office space
By Katie Burke CoStar News
The Vanguard Group is cutting ties with one of its Philadelphia-area offices, the latest move by the global investment adviser to trim its corporate real estate portfolio.
The Malvern, Pennsylvania-based firm opted not to renew the lease on its nearly 88,000-square-foot space at 45 Liberty Blvd., one of several properties it occupies that comprise its headquarters. It is the latest in a string of cuts the company has made to consolidate its national office presence, echoing moves by other large tenants across the United States as they look to adjust to evolving post-pandemic needs.
“Vanguard continuously evaluates the effective use of workspace in our leased and owned properties,” a Vanguard representative said in a statement to CoStar News. “As part of this effort, we are exiting our leased space at 45 Liberty Blvd. to optimize our existing footprint.”
The firm's looming exit is expected to spike the 155,000-square-foot building's vacancy rate to about 65% after years of being fully occupied. Vanguard's current lease is set to expire later this month.
The investment adviser's Malvern headquarters has long been spread across several properties in the Philadelphia suburb. The bulk of Vanguard's 20,000-person global workforce is based in the region, and despite its planned Liberty Boulevard exit, it still occupies just shy of 1.4 million square feet of office space there.
Yet similar to a cohort of tenants elsewhere across the country, Vanguard's decision to cut ties with some of its Malvern space is ultimately a result of reevaluating spatial needs and eliminating anything that has since become extraneous.
Vanguard is also letting go of one of its leases in Scottsdale, Arizona, where it is one of the region's largest employers. The firm had fully occupied the 123,340-square-foot building at 8501 E. Raintree Drive for the past two decades. In a sign of the national office market's strengthening recovery, the space is already set to be backfilled by mobile network provider Consumer Cellular.
Back in Malvern, the owner of 45 Liberty Blvd., FLD Group, is in talks with a prospective tenant to fill about 65,000 square feet of Vanguard's looming vacancy, according to a CMBS loan report.
