With both employers and employees still seeing value in the physical workplace, this means commercial real estate has an opportunity to create even stronger partnerships with tenant companies to promote innovation and reinvention to shape the offices
Example: Technology, Internet, Artificial Intelligence
Commercial office buildings are being built or modified (sometimes radically) to make them more appealing to employees who’ve embraced hybrid work schedules. “It’s about exciting people to come into the office,” says Adam Showalter.
12/1/2022 • Liz Wolf
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What does “branding” mean to you? For Amanda Heismann Gray, CPM, it’s a matter of perceptions. But it’s much more than that.
8/18/2022 • John Salustri
As we enter into the third year of the pandemic, the commercial real estate industry is caught between uncertainty and optimism. But, according to the experts, property professionals should be feeling more hopeful than hesitant in 2022.
2/3/2022 • Caroline Pomilla
If you think a healthy environment is defined in this age of COVID-19 as plexiglass dividers and hand sanitizers, your assumptions fall short of the mark.
To paraphrase Mark Twain, the death of the office has been greatly exaggerated. New research confirms that, despite the havoc wreaked this year on the sector by the pandemic, the office remains a key ingredient of business success, and the role of pr
30 percent of all office space will be flexible by 2030—and large corporate occupiers wil lbe driving much of the demand.
The abrupt changes in the way we work as a result of COVID-19 have already considerably impacted commercial real estate, and they will only continue to do so throughout budget season.
It’s been an amenities arms race for office building owners to provide wow-worthy spaces to prospective tenants. These once sought-after amenities, however, are perceived very differently during the COVID-19 pandemic. Property management teams are no
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