Experts discuss the latest trends, from demolishing office space to repurposing malls (again) to riding out the end of the warehouse boom
Comparing with retail, we have the counterexamples of shopping malls being converted to logistics and data centers.
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United States real-estate investors have spent the last several years on uncertain footing, facing wild swings in the economy and even more drastic pivots in how—and where—people work.
“The real estate industry is facing tectonic changes: inflation and interest rate increases, and technological shifts,†says Efraim Benmelech, a professor of finance and real estate at the Kellogg School. “As technology changes, the demand for certain properties changes.â€
After convening the ninth annual Kellogg Real Estate Conference and Venture Competition, Benmelech joined Kimberly Adams, managing director at J.P. Morgan Asset Management, Suzanne Martinez, director of investor relations at AEW Capital Management, and Jay Weaver, founder and managing partner at Quartz Lake Capital, for a conversation about the state of the U.S. real-estate industry. They discuss why a lot of offices will need to be demolished, why repurposed malls are being repurposed yet again, and why we may be nearing the end of the warehouse boom.
This conversation has been edited for length and clarity.
Kimberly ADAMS: The rapid change in how people use space has forced real estate to become very innovative, particularly over the last 15 years. For decades before that, you went to the office, you lived in an apartment, you went to the mall to shop. That has been disrupted and recreated, and there’s something very exciting about that.
[This article has been republished, with permission, from Kellogg Insight, the faculty research & ideas magazine of Kellogg School of Management at Northwestern University]