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PRIVACY
Opinion

Property expert Brendan Walsh gazes into his crystal ball for the post-Covid future of housing, the office and shops

“Prominent, Leicestershire housebuilders are optimistic at the spike of interest post-lockdown and seeing few cancellations”

Brendan Walsh, a Leicester-based real estate partner at national law firm Gunnercooke

Brendan Walsh, a Leicester-based real estate partner at national law firm Gunnercooke, considers where commercial property is heading post-lockdown.

"As the shackles are starting to be loosened from our period of confinement we need face the “new normal” or “abnormal” as the case may be.

The hope of a rapid return to life before Covid however seems a distant prospect.

Having spoken to industry leaders over the last few weeks including housebuilders, commercial developers, investors, agents, property professionals and occupiers, it is clear that this is not just a case of riding out the storm of an economic downturn, but of re-evaluating customer needs in terms of work, leisure and the home.

Whilst some trends were obvious pre-Covid such as the shift to online retail, there is no denying that the lockdown has coursed a long term seismic shift which needs a rapid response from the real estate industry.

An Industry in which it is notoriously difficult to generate change due to the physical nature of bricks and mortar, consultative planning regime and long term investment and letting strategy.

Different aspects of the real estate market will face different challenges, particularly as social distancing is likely to be with us for some time and the rise of home working and online shopping is a permanent, rather than temporary phenomena.

The death of the office?

There is no doubt that the experience of working from home with online group chat platforms will make a profound and prolonged difference to the office environment in a city such as Leicester.