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Commercial Property

º£½ÇÊÓÆµ boss of Savills Richard Rees on the return to the office and creating a new WDA like body

Welshman Richard Rees says planning and nimbyism at the heart of the failure to deliver new homes to meet demand

º£½ÇÊÓÆµ managing director of Savills Welshman Richard Rees.

A new Welsh Development Agency-type body tasked with curating key sites for development and de-risking them to entice private investment should be considered, Richard Rees, the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ managing director of property advisory firm Savills, believes.

Welshman Mr Rees, who has 8,000 staff under him across 136 offices in the º£½ÇÊÓÆµ, believes it is also time that more staff working in the public sector are encouraged – while hybrid working is here to stay and was already taking root prior to the pandemic – to spend more time in offices.

The then-Labour administration under the First Minister, the late Rhodri Morgan, took the decision to abolish the WDA back in 2004, which saw staff absorbed into the civil service of the Welsh Government.

While the Welsh Government is active in helping to facilitate commercial development – while also bringing major brownfield sites to market like the 100 acres at Brocastle in Bridgend – Cardiff-born Mr Rees believes a standalone statutory body would bring a more dynamic focus in seeking positive outcomes from public- and private-sector interactions.

Mr Rees, who began his career in Cardiff as a graduate surveyor with Savills in 1989, said: “Although I have a slightly wider role now as º£½ÇÊÓÆµ managing director, my career and trade over 30 years has been in development surveying, and the public sector working collaboratively and co-operatively with the private sector is fundamental.”

However, he said while the private sector is good at delivering buildings to “create a place”, he said it is often the case that without public-sector involvement projects fall down.

He recalled the involvement of the WDA in helping to kick-start development at the SA1 waterfront scheme in Swansea as a perfect example of how the public sector can enable private- sector investment.

He said: “It was 100 acres across a massive dock with a semi-institutionalised ABP selling it to the WDA, who then facilitated it by creating the infrastructure and having the vision to put in some technium buildings, to create innovation, alongside some residential. And we built the only grade A office building in Swansea at the time. I was part of the advisory group when the WDA started building that speculatively with development company Terrace Hill.