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An aerial view looking north from De Boelelaan towards the Amsterdam Zuidas business district
An aerial view looking north from De Boelelaan towards the Amsterdam Zuidas business district - Credit: slavonic777 / DepositPhotos - License: DepositPhotos
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office spaces
Atrium office complex in Amsterdam’s Zuidas
Amsterdam’s Zuidas
Amsterdam
NSI
Well House Amsterdam Zuidas
Tuesday, 7 July 2026 - 07:00

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Office property development in Netherlands stalls as costs surge and demand weakens

Office development in the Netherlands is under pressure. Rising construction costs, weaker demand for office space, and higher interest rates are forcing cancellations. One of these is the Well House project at Amsterdam’s Zuidas in Noord-Holland, according to Het Financieele Dagblad.

Real estate investor NSI has permanently halted the Well House project. Construction costs rose so sharply that the office development was no longer financially viable.

Across the sector, developers say conditions have worsened. New office projects are increasingly difficult to justify. Weak demand and tighter financing conditions are driving the slowdown.

The core problem is a widening gap between costs and what the market can support. Prices for building materials and labor have increased sharply. At the same time, demand for office space has declined.

Even when developers secure tenants, they still face a major hurdle. Investors must be willing to buy completed office buildings. If expected returns are too low, deals fall through. As a result, projects are delayed or canceled.

Cost data from construction analyst BDB shows the scale of the increase. Between June 2020 and June 2026, total construction costs for materials and labor rose by about 30 percent. Concrete prices increased even more sharply, rising roughly 75 percent over six years.

Despite the downturn, some opportunities remain. Martine Gründemann of Zadelhoff said demand is still strong for offices in prime city locations, especially near major train stations. In those areas, higher rents can still offset rising construction and financing costs. This helps keep development viable

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