A new, modernized network of motels – focused on a fun experience, efficiency in amenities, sleek design and of course, cleanliness and safety – could become the working traveler’s touch down for wi-fi hotspots or fiber cable connections to sustain their career along their journey.
Americans might never come back to the office, and Twitter is leading the charge.
Twitter’s plans for work from home indefinitely have prompted a wave of copycats. But its transformation has been two years in the making — and the rest of America can learn some lessons.
Handling Positive Coronavirus Cases Is The Next Frontier In Returning To The Office
As many companies grapple with how — or if — they should bring their employees back to the office, planning for positive coronavirus cases is emerging as a crucial part of the strategy.
How Much Space Will the Office Market Shed?
Office users have been shedding office space and moving to denser workplace models for years—and there office absorption rates were experiencing a structural decline.
To Win Back Employees, Offices Need Daylight, Views And Fresh Air
Two of the best-studied aspects of living indoors are the need for connection to the outside in the form of sunlight and nature views.
Persuading Workers To Come Back To The Office Still A Tough Sell
More than six months into the coronavirus pandemic, only about a quarter of office workers have returned to their places of work, a new study has found.
Is the office obsolete? Many travelers hope so
With offices closed during the coronavirus pandemic, employees have adapted to working from home. Now many of them want to be able to work from anywhere in the world.
Future of Work: Key Considerations to Create an Effective Hybrid Workplace
The research found that throughout the pandemic, organizations have been able to identify which types of work are better suited for physical vs virtual workplaces.
Get ready for the dynamic workplace: Work from home, work at the office
Now that WFH actually works (sometimes), not only do CEOs have control and flexibility over work, but everyone else too.
How much of a bite will remote work take out of future demand for office space?
The Uncertain Future of Corporate HQs
The Covid-19 pandemic has seen tens of millions of Americans engage in a gigantic experiment in working from home — one that looks to be more permanent than anyone might have imagined.
Three Effective Ways To Improve Building Ventilation
Is your building making people sick? The onset of the coronavirus has made the need for healthy buildings and better ventilation a top priority.
What the post-coronavirus workplace might look like
“Our own analysis reveals that about 70% of desks in the United States may not be in compliance with that standard. And they’re often sitting on very expensive real estate. So there’s an opportunity to help retrofit and reconfigure these spaces so they don’t sit idle.”
JLL to Debut New Tenant Experience Program
The brokerage firm is looking to make life easier and more enjoyable for the growing number of employees working remotely, as well as the few who have to return to their office.
Office Market Could Shed 145M Square Feet in the Next Two Years
Demand for office space has decreased 20% more during the pandemic than it did during the Great Financial Crisis.
Why Property Owners Need To Start Thinking About Public Health
Global Office Impact Report and Recovery Timing
Landlords race to improve air quality in buildings
Office Market Out Of Kilter Until 2025, Cushman & Wakefield Predicts
The recovery of the U.S. office market from the impact of the coronavirus pandemic and recession is going to be a slow process, likely stretching beyond 2024, Cushman & Wakefield predicts in a new report on the future of office space worldwide.
The recovery might be slow, but the pandemic doesn't necessarily mean the end of established patterns of office space use.
"Even though the impact of work-from-home trends will slow the office market recovery, the overall growth in office-using job sectors along with many other factors — including agglomeration, culture/branding, and productivity — indicate that the office will continue to play an important role in the economy going forward,” Cushman & Wakefield Global Head of Forecasting Rebecca Rockey said in a statement.
The report predicts that the U.S. office sector will lose about 145M SF of office occupancy in 2020 and 2021 as the result of the economy losing a net 1.7 million office jobs. As of Q2 2020, the office sector has already lost 23.1M SF of occupied space nationwide, with negative absorption continuing for at least another 18 months.
Remote Work's Appeal Shows Signs of Fading
A study from workplace strategy consulting firm Vocon found that work-from-home fatigue is increasing and productivity is decreasing.