Office Archives | Page 50 of 105 | CREtech
that will look more like home. “Nobody wants the stainless and bright white,” declared Craig Deitelzweig, CEO of Marx Realty, of the tenants that have been touring their buildings...
Employees have been working from their homes for so long, some companies are planning offices
LogMeIn had most of its 3,500 workers commute into the office daily before the coronavirus pandemic. Going forward, almost none of them will. After seeing their employees could be productive at home, LogMeIn's executives in October
Software company
Company takes $38M write-off on rent payments, struggles to lease up Dock 72. Boston Properties just made one of the most damning statements a major landlord has given on the co-working industry: It took a big write-off in recognition that flex tenants will struggle to pay rents
hasn’t stopped developers from doing what they do best. In fact, a bevy of newly constructed and redeveloped towers are poised to hit the market in Manhattan.
COVID-19 may have shocked the city’s commercial market but that
Smart Building Certification is the first to measure the ‘smartness’ of buildings Integrated building technology will enhance users’ wellbeing
MiddleCap, the real estate-focused investment group, announced today that its Southworks development in London has been awarded a Platinum Smart Building Certification. The 70,000 sq ft office scheme, which complet...
As recruiting and remote work go national, some salary ranges will too. Video chats will get smarter — and, potentially, creepier — thanks to artificial intelligence. The new “hybrid” workplace will have more time constraints than you ...
Investors are underestimating the speed and extent to which people will return to work in offices and head back to shopping malls as the pandemic subsides, according to the head of Brookfield Asset Management. Bruce Flatt, chief executive of the Canadian investment group, is preparing to complete a US$5.9-billion deal to delist Brookfield’s property arm amid frustration that the equity market do...
With nonessential offices closed since December, most office occupiers are once again facing uncertainty about their office space, waiting until California and LA County regulations allow for a broader return to the office and until pandemic conditions improve so workers and employers feel better about returning to a physical office.
In May, when the pandemic was solidly in what would be its first peak in cities around the United States, office electricity consumption dropped by nearly 25%—a predictable dip as many companies closed their doors and turned off the lights. Energy-sucking office equipment and lighting systems were switched either off or to standby mode as workers left the buildings, and...