Breathing New Life into Old Office Parks
By adding new uses and amenities, older properties can be remade into magnets for younger skilled workers.
Artificial lagoons can bring white sand beaches to surprising locations.
By adding new uses and amenities, older properties can be remade into magnets for younger skilled workers.
New research indicates a healthier indoor environment can help attract and retain employees — and make properties more attractive to investors.
Activated outdoor spaces boost employee engagement and well-being.
There are a lot of reasons for developers to embrace these temporary spaces, but due diligence is required.
How advancements in transportation, technology and construction continue to converge.
A 1990s-era workplace has been reinvented with technology to boost the tenant experience.
In October, NAIOP gathered national research directors for an in-depth discussion of city rankings, the future of coworking and other vital topics.
They can ease movement inside facilities, but they also come with design challenges.
Sooner or later, real estate will have to adapt to this fast-gaining transportation revolution.
Development’s summer 2025 issue explores experiential retail and the brick-and-mortar resurgence. Also featured: a modern warehouse campus in Toronto that honors its manufacturing heritage; a coalition of Oregon real estate organizations working to revitalize downtown Portland; and the creative capital stack strategy behind a mixed-use project in West Baltimore.
The spring 2025 issue offers insights about where the office market might be heading over the coming year, explores the complexities of mission critical development, and provides detailed looks at two transformative mixed-use projects: The Bowl at Ballantyne in Charlotte and Baltimore Peninsula in Maryland.
Development magazine’s winter issue delves into the evolving uses of artificial intelligence in the commercial real estate industry, from lease management and building operations to portfolio assessment and data analysis.