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You will find many
Irvine office space listings on BuildingSearch.com. We track thousands of available office space listing in Irvine, as well as industrial,
retail, and mixed-use developments. Be sure to include the various
Irvine office space categories while searching for
Irvine office space listings.
Office space Irvine is generally defined by the quality of the office building available and ranked accordingly.
- Class A office space Irvine is the highest quality office space or buildings available for lease. Most Irvine office buildings of this caliber
provide Irvine office space for lease by suite and house many commercial real estate tenants in various sized office suites. You may search
directly for Irvine office space listings on BuildingSearch.com’s advanced search engine by clicking on a region of our homepage map.
- Class B Irvine office space listings are the second highest quality buildings available in the Irvine office space rental market. These buildings also
offer office space for rent suite by suite.
Note: When using our advanced search engine sort filters, to show all
office space Irvine available, be sure to include the Office/R&D building category.
Irvine office space listings are generally leased by the year, but the office space rental market offers other shorter term options.
Some office space for lease in Irvine will rent by the month and are marketed by executive office suite operators.
Irvine office space for lease in
available executive office suites is the most flexible in the office space rental market but generally these office space listings rent at a premium
compared to the traditional
Irvine office space rental market.
Irvine is an incorporated city in Orange County, California, United States. It is a planned city, mainly developed by the Irvine Company since the 1960s.
The Irvine Company owns much of the
Irvine office space for lease, but they also own some of the
Irvine office space for sale as well.
They have developed various
Irvine office space projects throughout the area. All of these
Irvine office space listings can be found on BuildingSearch.com.
Formally incorporated in 1971, the 46 square mile (120 km²) city has a population of 202,050 (as of 2007). It currently has plans to annex an undeveloped
area to the north, and has already annexed the former El Toro Marine Corps Air Station, most of which is to be made into a park called the Orange County
Great Park. Currently, only Anaheim is larger in land area than Irvine, however when Irvine annexes the southern and eastern unincorporated areas, it will
surpass the size of Anaheim and become the county's largest city based on area.
Irvine is home to the University of California, Irvine (UCI), the Orange County Center of University of Southern California, Irvine Campus of Alliant
International University, Concordia University, and Irvine Valley College. The area is also home to a number of corporations, particularly in the
technology sector that occupy much of the
office space Irvine.
The layout of Irvine was designed by Los Angeles architect William Pereira and Irvine Company employee Raymond Watson, and is nominally divided into
townships called villages. The townships are separated by six-lane streets. Each township includes a spectrum of similar types of dwellings, along with
shopping, religious institutions and schools. Commercial districts are checker-boarded in a periphery around the central townships.
Irvine office space
can be found in the central townships.
The median income for a household in the city is $85,624, and the median income for a family is $97,592. 9.1% of the population and 5.0% of families are
below the poverty line. Of the total population, 6.1% of those under the age of 18 and 5.6% of those 65 and older are living below the poverty line.
In 2006, the median gross rent paid for housing was $1,660 a month. This was the highest of any place in the United States of more than 100,000 people.
The skyrocketing high cost of housing is a major issue in Irvine and Orange County, while the city council is on a frantic pace to approve future
income-subsidized housing projects to meet the demands of working-class citizens to live and work in
Irvine office space or elsewhere in Orange County.
Like much of Orange County, most resident voters are registered in the Republican Party.