daryn
June 22, 2022
When the world changed in 2020, the workplace changed with it – to an age of remote and hybrid work arrangements and flexible working schedules. Security and accessibility while also drawing insights became paramount, and cloud-based tools like access control and workspace management solutions developed into a new utility, says Brivo founder and CEO Steve Van Till.
Office Archives | Page 5 of 105 | CREtech
When the world changed in 2020, the workplace changed with it – to an age of remote and hybrid work arrangements and flexible working schedules. Security and accessibility while also drawing insights became paramount, and cloud-based tools like access control and workspace management solutions developed into a new utility, says Brivo founder and CEO Steve Van Till.
No full return to the office for five years, commercial real estate chief predicts.
As employees increasingly demand flexible, remote work, the CEO of Avison Young predicts the full return to the office will take longer than real estate landlords anticipate.
What research tells us about how to make employees less stressed, more productive—and willing to leave home
A slowdown in tech hiring could have a big impact on the overall office market, according to one industry watcher.
I’ve been reading much commentary recently on how to measure, to value, the modern office. Especially post Covid, as we clearly head into a world of distributed working, where the HQ is no longer the be all and end all of our working lives.
Mostly I’ve not been very impressed. The thinking seems to be too cons...
Office leasing activity rebounded to pre-pandemic levels in the first quarter this year, but the amount of space that tenants vacated was larger than the amount of space that tenants began occupying in the first quarter, according to a new report from JLL.
Landlords and employers are spending more money to draw staffers from their home hidey-holes — as those same workers are questioning the need for a company office altogether.
Some of the biggest names in the real estate world on both sides of the Atlantic are gearing up for a very particular challenge: taking old office buildings that are big emitters of carbon, making them more energy efficient, and turning a profit in doing so.
New York City’s office market increasingly resembles the demographics of the nation: a land of haves and have-nots, with a shrinking middle class.
Like many of you reading this post, I talk to a lot of people about the “future of office buildings”.