Studio TILT challenges what an ‘office should look like’ at Hiscox
Circular economy principles and colour through art were used to form a workplace that extends beyonds the insurance HQ's physical space in London.
The office property market is constantly changing. We bring you the latest views from right across the commercial property spectrum.
The fight to save the Oxford Street Marks & Spencer flagship dramatises the fate of department stores across the country. Demolition is not the only answer.
Build-to-rent developer, Quintain Living, is beginning to look and sound like a US-style multifamily operator. So what does it mean for UK furnished apartments?
Nobody is pretending that the UK hotel development pipeline will start to flow again like it did before March 2020. But there are plenty of encouraging signs the hotel building business will bounce back. One year after the pandemic began, Mix offers six reasons to be hopeful.
One of London’s most adventurous office developers believes that the future of workspace lies in funky eye-catching corporate HQs and a vast spectrum of hospitality-based workplaces, from cafés and pubs to hotels and coworking. David Thame explores.
The fight to save the Oxford Street Marks & Spencer flagship dramatises the fate of department stores across the country. Demolition is not the only answer.
If you’re expecting the next few years to be dominated by a heavy work-stream of office refurbishments, think again.
Competitive socialising is getting cleverer, more profitable and changing shape. We explore the surge in demand for new floorspace which you cannot afford to ignore.
If you’re expecting the next few years to be dominated by a heavy work-stream of office refurbishments, think again.
Competitive socialising is getting cleverer, more profitable and changing shape. We explore the surge in demand for new floorspace which you cannot afford to ignore.
David Thame speaks to two fast-growing operators about who will prosper, how and whether some will go to the wall.
Here’s a promise about 2022: it won’t be like last year. A heady combination of investors in a panic to spend, consumers with savings to spend, lockdown exhaustion and Keynesian animal spirits will power the property market in 2022.
The UK’s prime office markets are roaring back in to life, with towers proving to be top prospects.
No signs that Omicron dented the recovery in London’s luxury hotel market, as profits surge at the capital’s top destinations.
A bounce-back for the industry as WeWork sale price sets hearts racing.
Two research projects show a sharp pivot away from desk-bound office formatting.