From turbulence to transformation – a time to re-think real estate
October 06, 2020
From turbulence to transformation – a time to re-think real estateOctober 06, 2020
Real estate is at the centre of the COVID-19 revolution. That’s inevitable - because everything that ever happens to you, or to your business, happens in real estate. No one ever got married in a share certificate.As long as people need to live and work, real estate will never be redundant - but every generation must reinvent the real estate industry to respond to new ways of living and working. Now it’s our turn. Many of real estate’s key sectors must now pack ten years of evolution into the next two, or risk extinction. Our high street, shopping centre, offices, retail and hospitality sectors all need a fundamental re-think if they are to survive and thrive. Of course, they need, and should get, some state help and support. Many of them are not only viable sectors, but will spring back and thrive once COVID-19 has been tamed (and one day it will be, perhaps soon). But we need to do much more than just preserve the old ways in bail-out aspic. With sectors, as with old species, when they wane, new ones emerge to take their place – and the government should encourage this economic process. All across the market, we are seeing entrepreneurial investors, landlords and tenants re-imagining real estate and bringing new business models in to replace the old. Only the inventive (and, as always, the lucky) will survive. Cotton mills destroyed hand loom weaving and artisan home working. If there is better way to do something, people adopt it. Teams, Zoom and internet shopping and on-line socialising will revolutionise real estate. You can try and hold back these waves of change, like an analogue King Canute, but they will just wash you away. Our occupier clients have realised this and they are responding with energy and vigour by:
As a leading international occupier practice, we are advising our global clients from board level strategic portfolio planning through to the implementation of their physical and technological moves. This is the most challenging and transformational time for occupiers in a generation, and that can’t be downplayed. But this turbulence also brings an historic opportunity to rethink the way occupiers use property, and to create stronger and more agile businesses. Key contacts
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