Rethinking Value in a Maturing Market (image)

Rethinking Value in a Maturing Market

As Dubai’s office stock matures, selective repositioning is beginning to emerge as a practical strategy.

For much of the last two decades, Dubai’s commercial real estate narrative has centred on new development. Office buildings rose quickly, tenants followed, and the focus remained on expansion. But with many assets now approaching the 20-year mark, attention is beginning to shift towards how to maintain relevance rather than simply build anew.

The recent sale of Aurora Tower in Dubai Media City provides an early indication of this change. Developed in the early 2000s and currently well-let, the building was acquired by investment firm Sweid & Sweid with plans for a targeted upgrade. The rationale is clear: the building sits in a sought-after cluster, has a stable tenant base, and offers scope to improve performance through measured refurbishment. It reflects a growing interest in repositioning—not because it’s fashionable, but because, in the right circumstances, it makes financial sense.

Compared to global markets, Dubai’s office stock is still relatively young. Most of it was delivered during two main waves: in the early 2000s and again after 2012. But that compressed timeline means many buildings are now reaching a similar stage of maturity at once. Unlike older cities where building age is staggered, Dubai’s development pattern may lead to concentrated demand for upgrades in certain districts over the next few years.

At present, around 15–20% of the city’s office stock is nearing the typical age where systems begin to date and tenant requirements start to shift. This may not seem urgent, but as more occupiers look for flexible space, improved infrastructure, and stronger sustainability credentials, the gap between newer and older stock is becoming more visible.

In other global cities, retrofit decisions are often triggered by regulation: carbon benchmarks, accessibility standards, or energy performance ratings. In Dubai, it’s more a matter of economics and demand. When potential rents after refurbishment are meaningfully higher than current returns, and when building fundamentals are sound, the case to reinvest is increasingly compelling.

Several recent transactions - Aurora Tower among them - involve buildings acquired with repositioning in mind. These are typically not distressed assets. They’re centrally located, often with established tenants, but no longer aligned with the expectations of today’s market. For some investors, they represent a quieter but still effective route to value creation, especially as opportunities for greenfield development narrow in key areas.

Still, repositioning is not a straightforward process. Valuation gaps between buyer and seller, regulatory complexity, and fragmented ownership can all present challenges. And without incentives to retrofit, the decision often rests on whether rental uplift and occupancy prospects can justify the capital outlay.

But for developers and fund managers looking beyond the next ground-breaking, this is becoming a relevant part of the investment conversation. In certain submarkets, particularly where land supply is constrained and tenant demand remains robust, repositioning may offer a path to steady, asset-level outperformance.

As more of Dubai’s office stock approaches this transitional phase, understanding where and when to act will become increasingly important. Reinvestment will not be appropriate in every case, but where the fundamentals are in place, it is likely to play a growing role in how value is sustained and created over the next cycle.

A growing share of Dubai’s commercial buildings are reaching the point where refurbishment becomes a strategic consideration. For investors, understanding where and when to act could define the next phase of opportunity.

Related Thought Leadership

Al Maktoum International: A Catalyst for Dubai’s Industrial Real Estate (image)
Thought Leadership • UAE

Al Maktoum International: A Catalyst for Dubai’s Industrial Real Estate

The expansion of Al Maktoum International Airport (DWC) represents a major shift in Dubai’s logistics sector. Once complete, it will be the largest airport in the world by capacity, reinforcing Dubai’s position as a critical global trade and distribution hub. But its impact won’t be limited to aviation, it will reshape how industrial real estate is developed, occupied, and invested in across the city.
Tilana Kruger • 2025-08-01
What Occupiers Want: UAE (image)
Thought Leadership • UAE

What Occupiers Want: UAE

The latest global occupier survey from Cushman & Wakefield tracks how real estate priorities are evolving in step with broader shifts in corporate structure, cost control, and workforce strategy.
Robert Thomas • 2025-07-23
UAE Real Estate Mid-Year 2025: A Market Tightening Beneath the Headline Stability (image)
Thought Leadership • UAE

UAE Real Estate Mid-Year 2025: A Market Tightening Beneath the Headline Stability

At the halfway point of 2025, the UAE real estate market remains anchored by the same fundamentals that have drawn capital here for years: population growth, government-led diversification, and an expanding role in global capital flows.
P.P. Varghese • 2025-07-18
YOUR PRIVACY MATTERS TO US

With your permission we and our partners would like to use cookies in order to access and record information and process personal data, such as unique identifiers and standard information sent by a device to ensure our website performs as expected, to develop and improve our products, and for advertising and insight purposes.

Alternatively click on More Options and select your preferences before providing or refusing consent. Some processing of your personal data may not require your consent, but you have a right to object to such processing.

You can change your preferences at any time by returning to this site or clicking on Privacy & Cookies.

MORE OPTIONS