All Property Week articles in 7 October 2022 – Page 4
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News
Details of £1.5bn Liverpool Street station development plan revealed
The key elements of the £1.5bn transformation programme for London’s Liverpool Street station have been revealed.
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News
Edge and GSAM appoint Mace for 28-storey London Bridge tower build
Developer Edge and Goldman Sachs Asset Management (GSAM) have appointed constructor Mace as general contractor for a 28-storey building close to London Bridge.
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News
RLB’s Mark Weaver becomes global board director
Independent construction, property and management consultancy Rider Levett Bucknall (RLB) has appointed Mark Weaver as global board director.
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Insight
Best to gather data before gambling
In 2018 I heard a keynote speech by Ian Robertson, former board member of automotive giant BMW Group. He made a point that has stayed with me ever since.
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News
Property Week Digital Edition – 7 October 2022
Scottish rent freeze bill sparks fears of housebuilding slowdown; A sneak preview of the transformed Battersea Power Station ahead of the landmark building’s opening next week; Looming energy efficiency rule change spells trouble for small retail landlords
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Insight
A meltdown is wide of the mark
“What do you think of Sterling’s performance yesterday?” I asked a neighbour a day after the mini-Budget. “Dreadful,” he answered. “He just couldn’t get the ball across to Kane.” No, I clarified: “The pound versus the US dollar, not Raheem versus the Italian defence.”
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Professional
Let’s look to the next generation
‘The future of the industry is in good hands’ has become the standard response from the judging panel for the Women in Property National Student Awards.
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Professional
Keep it in the family
Poll reveals family feuds over inheritance of Baby Boomers’ wealth
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Insight
Why wellbeing at work is more important than ever
With World Mental Health Day taking place on 10 October, Claire Robson asks what steps property companies are taking to improve the wellbeing of both their own staff and tenants.
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News
Lendlease office development plans turned down
Developer Lendlease’s plans for a major 18-storey office block development in Elephant and Castle have been rejected on the grounds of “excessive height, mass and bulk”.
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Insight
Tories must tackle housing deficit
As Michael Heseltine, a key architect of many of the housing and regeneration policies pursued by the Conservatives over the past 40 years, once put it: “Home ownership stimulates the attitudes of independence and self-reliance that are the bedrock of a free society.”
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News
Retail sector struggling to hit the energy efficiency deadline
Experts predict major landlords will succeed in meeting the April deadline but smaller private investors may not.
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Professional
Energy costs and rental markets
Residential rents, currently at record-high levels, are predicted to increase.
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Professional
Q&A: Five minutes with Krishma Kapoor, property and development consultant at SLC Property
Krishma Kapoor, property and development consultant at property management company SLC Property, on how she got started in property, the superpower she’d like to have and her number-one travel destination.
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Insight
Proptech could be the Conservatives’ saving grace
On day one of the Conservative Party Conference, the levelling-up secretary Simon Clarke said that levelling up was still “fundamental” to Liz Truss’s government – while his department, and indeed the UK, are preparing for a period of significant economic uncertainty.
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Markets
Housing horizon clouds over in the South East
The region is among those likely to experience the slowest house price growth.
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Professional
What role can planning play in the delivery of net zero carbon?
For those of us who have studied the Brundtland Report 1987, we know that the heart of sustainable development is real estate and the planning system.
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Insight
‘Universal building’ key to future
Much has been said about future-proofing our cities. How do we do it? One solution is the concept of the universal building – one that, when designed properly upfront, can regenerate over time, adapting to the needs of today as well as the unforeseen needs of tomorrow.
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Insight
People are at the heart of BTR
In the midst of a cost-of-living crisis with inflation and interest rates rising and energy prices hitting record highs, housebuying will likely now be an even bigger barrier for many, and with people renting for longer, landlords need to demonstrate good value through the quality of product and service delivery.
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Insight
Working together for better digs
The reign of her late Majesty, Queen Elizabeth II, saw enormous change in all areas of society, but perhaps none more so than in higher education.