The Urban Developer
AdvertiseEventsWebinarsUrbanity
Industry Excellence
Urban Leader
Sign In
Membership
Latest
Menu
Location
Sector
Category
Content
Type
Newsletters
TheUrbanDeveloper
Follow
About
About Us
Membership
Awards
Events
Webinars
Listings
Resources
Terms & Conditions
Commenting Policy
Privacy Policy
Republishing Guidelines
Editorial Charter
Complaints Handling Policy
Contact
General Enquiries
Advertise
Contribution Enquiry
Project Submission
Membership Enquiry
Newsletter
Stay up to date and with the latest news, projects, deals and features.
Subscribe
ADVERTISEMENT
SHARE
print
Print
OfficeRenee McKeownWed 06 Aug 25

Toy Billionaire Brings North Shore Office Tower to Market

Northpoint Tower at 100 Miller Street, North Sydney property has a large hotel, office and retail offering.

Billionaire Francis Choi will find out if third time’s a charm in the Sydney office sector as he brings another asset to market.

Choi has listed Northpoint Tower at 100 Miller Street, North Sydney, as the sector shows clear sign an upswing is under way.

Industry sources told The Urban Developer the price expectation for the asset was around $400 million.

The Hong Kong investor in October of last year sold 1 Castlereagh Street for $196.4 million, almost $20 million less than he paid for it five years earlier.

And in February of this year his Exchange Centre also did not meet expectations, selling to PGIM Real Estate and Anton Real Estate Partners for $250 million, a substantial discount on the expected $300 million.

A major difference this time around is the North Sydney property includes a substantial hotel and retail component.

The billionaire founder of Early Light Hong Kong, who made his fortune in toy manufacturing, completed ownership of the 34-storey tower in 2018 when he picked up the remaining 50 per cent share for $300 million.

two images the first is of the 1970s northpoint tower in north sydney and the second is the brand new retail area inside looking at the escalators from the second to ground floor.
▲ Northpoint Tower at 100 Miller Street, North Sydney, includes office, hotel and retail components.

The property is the subject of an expressions-of-interest campaign being run by Knight Frank agents Dominic Ong and Rob Sewell and closing September 10. 

Tenants across the 26,820sq m of office space include Dynatrace Asia, Ferrero Australia, Holcim Australia and EG Group. 

The tower’s Vibe Hotel occupies 187 rooms over eight levels while the retail component totals 4728sq m above a six-level basement carpark.

Harbour City leasing on rise


National CBD vacancies nudged up from 13.7 per cent to 14.3 per cent as rising levels of supply outpaced demand, according to the Property Council of Australia’s biannual report.

That was not expected to slow as 26,400sq m come online in the next six months as businesses increasingly moved towards premium office space, the report said.

The new stock is spread across Adelaide (23,170sq m), Canberra (16,000sq m), Melbourne (66,127sq m) and Sydney (26,400sq m).

“Australia’s CBDs have seen plenty of supply during the past five years, with 2.6 million sq m going live, totalling 13.7 per cent of the total office space in our cities,” the report said.

“In the past six months, the amount of occupied premium office stock increased by 2.7 per cent, a 7 per cent rise compared to the same time last year.

“This growth is much stronger than in other office grades. Grade A occupied stock rose by 0.1 per cent, while Grades B, C and D all saw declines—down 0.5 per cent, 0.3 per cent and 0.4 per cent, respectively.”

Property Council chief executive Mike Zorbas said the slew of new office supply during the past few years was part of a refresh of office spaces in our cities.

“We have seen a year-and-a-half of positive demand for office space, with more businesses taking up office space than leaving behind,” Zorbas said.

“Tenants are capitalising on opportunities to occupy premium buildings in prime CBD locations, with premium space continuing to see higher demand levels than lower-grade buildings.”

Low supply and slightly negative demand drove a slight vacancy increase in non-CBD markets from 17.2 to 17.3 per cent. The overall Australian office vacancy increased from 14.7 to 15.2 per cent.

CBD vacancy change, six months to July, 2025

null
▲ Source: PCA
OfficeSydneyMarketsDeal
AUTHOR
Renee McKeown
More articles by this author
ADVERTISEMENT
TOP STORIES
Exclusive

No Cookie Cutters: Finding Feasibility in HAFF Projects

Patrick Lau
6 Min
Exclusive

Brisbane Transaction Activity Steams Ahead for A-Grade Residential

Taryn Paris
5 Min
Exclusive

Starchitect Ivan Harbour on the Power of Small Spaces

Taryn Paris
6 Min
Stockland bumps up its apartment pipeline in melbourne and sydney
Exclusive

Stockland Re-Enters Density in $5bn Apartment Play

Renee McKeown
4 Min
Woolloongabba Precinct Vulture St
Exclusive

Brisbane Developer in Cross River Rail Compensation Tussle

Clare Burnett
4 Min
View All >
Sponsored

Infrastructure’s Next Decade: Bold, Enduring Public Value

Gabba Carl St Modular DA render hero
Development

Nine Month Build: Modular Highrise Pitched for Gabba

Phil Bartsch
the plans are for a four-storey development with 20 apartments at 52 The Parade, Norwood just down from the 1851-built pub The Colonist, just outside the city centre.
Residential

Bid to Downsize Norwood Shoptop Apartment Scheme

Renee McKeown
Storeys would reduce, but not the number of apartments under the revised plans for the site of a former Norwood service …
LATEST
Infrastructure

Infrastructure’s Next Decade: Bold, Enduring Public Value

3 Min
Gabba Carl St Modular DA render hero
Development

Nine Month Build: Modular Highrise Pitched for Gabba

Phil Bartsch
4 Min
the plans are for a four-storey development with 20 apartments at 52 The Parade, Norwood just down from the 1851-built pub The Colonist, just outside the city centre.
Residential

Bid to Downsize Norwood Shoptop Apartment Scheme

Renee McKeown
2 Min
Exclusive

No Cookie Cutters: Finding Feasibility in HAFF Projects

Patrick Lau
6 Min
View All >
ADVERTISEMENT
Article originally posted at: https://uat.theurbandeveloper.com/articles/northpoint-sydney-office-market-nsw