The office market across the U.S. continues to adjust and adapt to an environment in which workers bring a new perspective about their ideal work setting,[..]
Filter by:
Filter by:
- Business Services & Best Practices (171)
- Headquarter Highlights (151)
- Market Trends & Analysis (128)
- Technology & Innovation (99)
- Office (98)
- Industrial (64)
- Management & Ownership (47)
- Societal & Environmental Issues (26)
- Investments (23)
- Deal Center (22)
- Landlord & Tenant Strategies (19)
- Economy & Politics (16)
- advocacy (1)
Office Redefined: Ledger & Community-Driven Workplace Design
As the commercial real estate landscape changes, SIOR members persist at the forefront, navigating future trends and seizing new opportunities. Recently,[..]
The Colors of Commercial Real Estate: A Mid-Year Office & Industrial Outlook
As we reach the halfway mark of 2023, the commercial real estate industry is an unfinished painting, comprised of varying colors and brushstrokes—from[..]
The Office is Changing: Here are the Five Things the C-Suite Can’t Ignore
Republished with permission from dmagazine.com.
Flight to Quality
Office Assets
As companies of all sizes begin to implement their return-to-work plans, conversations around the future of the office continue to evolve.[..]
Giving Life to Office Space
The recent spate of converting existing offices into space that can accommodate the needs of life science companies has made the media sit up and take[..]
The Great Wait? Or The Great Return?
Service-Oriented Firms Lead the Way While Larger Corporations are Holding Back.
Is the “Great Wait” for things to return to business as usual finally[..]
Reinventing the Office Space Post-COVID 19
COVID-19 created a paradigm shift in the way many organizations view office space usage. Across the globe, companies have adopted hybrid-workplace models,[..]
The Office of the Future Remains as Uncertain as Ever
Republished with permission from Commercial Property Executive.
Raising Downtowns Up
“Ghost towns.” That is howBloombergreporters recently described London, New York, and San Francisco, all of which experienced significant decreases in[..]