Parking space requirements
are significantly reduced in
a driverless city.
Facilities should address the
lifestyle needs of the global
diverse workforce. 24/7 cafe
and gym facilities, prayer
rooms and wellness spaces. All
facilities should be available
24/7 as we want to be able to
work, chill and eat at any hour
of the day and night.
Fluid Spaces to enable human
interaction. Do we still need
open plan offices when people
work on project basis? Moveable
walls and wireless technology
should become standard to be
able to change the workplace
settings at any time.
Digital Security Concierge
checks via face recognition
to secure the building when
people walk in and out all
day long.
Negotiating floor areas based
on on-time demand for space
or desks/rooms.
Measure how assets perform
in use. Not only from a
financial return on investment
but from a societal, cultural
and human perspective.
In-house Tech Expert. Stay
on top of the latest tech
innovations, implement and
stay attractive to your users.
Use business intelligence in
ways people use workplace
and design spaces.
Build trust with your tenants.
Listen to their needs. Don’t
make promises you can’t
keep. And keep them up to
date. Your reputation will
speak for you, and negative
gossip spreads even quicker
in a world where everything
is connected.
A BRAVE NEW WORLD
There will be no loyalty to new office supply.
Buildings must be flexible to adapt to changes,
meet the lifestyle needs of its permanent and
transient occupants, and successfully meld physical
and digital spaces. There will be a greater variety
of options as organizations will require diverse,
activity-based workspaces that are needed to
attract and keep the right people.
Workplace monitoring continuously assesses how
people work and what they need from the space
now, physically and emotionally. Spaces will have to
become more fluid and dynamically configurable;
3D printing will emerge to be the perfect answer
to revolutionize office fit-outs, highly customizable
and easily recycled. Leases will encompass both the
use of fixed and temporary spaces, with co-working
concepts evolving to be a staple. With the demand
for space turning more fluid, occupiers will want the
smallest amount of space with commitments not
exceeding the hour.
While any attempt to foretell the future will almost
always fall short, the changes envisioned have
already been set in motion. Rapid advances in smart
building and digital technologies will invariably
compress the life cycle of office buildings, posing
a challenge to landlords to maintain performance
as their assets age. The emergence of co-working
concepts – the single biggest disruptor in the office
real estate industry – shows how demand for office
space can be shaped in the future. In all probability,
that future is now.
KEY POINTERS FOR (RE)DEVELOPING
WORKSPACE WITH AN EYE TOWARDS
THE FUTURE
SIGRID G. ZIALCITA
Managing Director
Research and Investment
Strategy, Asia Pacific
sigrid.zialcita@ap.cushwake.comWYAI KAY LAI
Associate Director
Research, Asia Pacific
wyaikay.lai@ap.cushwake.comTICA HESSING
Human Geographer & Urban
Planner, The Netherlands
tica.hessing@ap.cushwake.comEMPLOYEE EXPERIENCE
8 The Occupier Edge