• Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer
  • Home
  • About
  • Gowling WLG
  • Legal information
  • Privacy statement
  • Cookie Policy
  • Home
  • About
  • Posts
  • Blogs
    • B2022
    • The IP Blog
    • Public Law & Regulation
    • AI
    • The Unified Patents Court

LoupedIn

MIPIM 2022: What will the office industry look like in the future?

March 15, 2022, Felicity Lindsay

MIPIM 2022: What will the office industry look like in the future?

MIPIM is back! After a hiatus due to the pandemic, the international property conference is back in Cannes this week (March 2022).  This year the event is focusing on six key themes, which all filter into an overarching theme of Driving Urban Change.

One of the themes takes a closer look at the office uprising. After COVID-19 caused many people to start working from home, 2022 should be the year we start to see those employees returning to the office again. In fact, MIPIM has likened the office resurgence to “the Phoenix coming to birth again from its ashes!”

Ever since the world went into lockdown and people began working from home at a scale never seen before, there has been lots of discussion on what we can expect next for the offices market.

Our recent report, ‘A more flexible future: redefining the role of the office’, was carried out in collaboration with the British Property Federation, and was based on a survey of 497 senior executives responsible for making property decisions. In the report we provided an analysis of the changing office use habits, the locations that occupiers are looking at moving to and how quickly they were willing to make that move.

We found that flexibility across the board was, of course, paramount – whether that was in terms of flexible space or flexible tenancies. Many of the respondents, and indeed something we’ve heard anecdotally also, said that flexibility was important due to fluctuating occupation levels following COVID-19 and increased remote working – a trend which we expect to remain.

That being said, our research found that an overwhelming majority of occupiers agreed that there will always be a business need for an office: to facilitate collaboration and maximise the performance of individuals and teams. In fact, this year alone we have acted on a large number of deals for our clients within the office space.

In our ever changing world, what we needed in 2020, changed in 2021, and is changing again in 2022 and beyond. As our world adapts to life post-pandemic and starts to go back to what some may consider as ‘normal’, the offices market has been changed forever. 

Going forward there are likely to be a range of  requirements from office tenants, including the need for office space to be more sustainable as more and more businesses outline their net zero carbon goals and require workplaces that feed into these. This is coupled with a requirement for quality digital infrastructure that will aid connectivity and data security – the need for both has been accelerated thanks to more employees working from home and our increased reliance on using the internet.

For now, these are just expectations of what may be to come. To find out exactly what the property decision makers think, we will be re-running our research to find out what has changed and to compare what they said in 2021. Sign up to our mailing list to be the first to receive the research when it comes out.

About the author(s)

Photo of Felicity Lindsay
Felicity Lindsay
View Felicity's profile |  See recent postsBlog biography

Felicity Lindsay is a London-based Gowling WLG partner who focusses on commercial development and investment transactions in the real estate sector.

  • Felicity Lindsay
    https://loupedin.blog/author/felicitylindsay/
    Ten things you need to know about office leases
  • Felicity Lindsay
    https://loupedin.blog/author/felicitylindsay/
    Navigating a changing market – key issues for real estate owners and occupiers
  • Felicity Lindsay
    https://loupedin.blog/author/felicitylindsay/
    Heading back to prosperity – A green light for UK office developments

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: MIPIM 2022, Real Estate

Views expressed in this blog do not necessarily reflect those of Gowling WLG.

NOT LEGAL ADVICE. Information made available on this website in any form is for information purposes only. It is not, and should not be taken as, legal advice. You should not rely on, or take or fail to take any action based upon this information. Never disregard professional legal advice or delay in seeking legal advice because of something you have read on this website. Gowling WLG professionals will be pleased to discuss resolutions to specific legal concerns you may have.

Primary Sidebar

Recent Posts

  • Sole(ly) aesthetic? The Birkenstock Sandal goes to the Federal Court of Justice
  • UK Litigation Funding: reform or retain?
  • Arbitration Act 2025 receives Royal Assent

Tags

Artificial Intelligence (AI) (62) Autonomous vehicles (11) b2022 (19) Birmingham 2022 (8) Birmingham 2022 Commonwealth Games (15) Brexit (23) Climate change (16) Collective defined contribution (6) COP26 (11) Copyright (11) COVID-19 (23) Cyber security (7) Data protection (8) Defined contribution (7) Dispute Resolution (14) Employment (14) employment law (11) Environment (18) Environmental Societal Governance (9) ESG (50) ESG and pensions (11) General Election 2024 and pensions (8) Intellectual Property (86) IP (10) Life sciences (7) litigation funding (8) net zero (6) Patents (40) Pensions (53) Pension Schemes Act 2021 (11) Pensions dashboards (7) Pensions in 2022 (10) Pensions law (43) Procurement (7) Public Law & Regulation (39) Real Estate (27) Retail (8) sustainability (21) Tech (58) The Week In Pensions (11) Trademarks (16) UK (15) unified patents court (9) UPC (39) Week in HR (8)

Categories

Archives

Gowling WLG is an international law firm comprising the members of Gowling WLG International Limited, an English Company Limited by Guarantee, and their respective affiliates. Each member and affiliate is an autonomous and independent entity. Gowling WLG International Limited promotes, facilitates and co-ordinates the activities of its members but does not itself provide services to clients. Our structure is explained in more detail on our Legal Information page.

Footer

  • Home
  • About
  • Gowling WLG
  • Legal information
  • Privacy statement
  • Cookie Policy

© 2025 Gowling WLG