flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

What developers and property owners really want from AEC firms

Building Owners

What developers and property owners really want from AEC firms

Calling all real estate developers, building owners, and facilities directors, BD+C editors would like your expertise and input for our "What Owners Want" editorial research project.


By Robert Cassidy, Executive Editor  | December 16, 2020
What developers and property owners really want from AEC firms

Photo: Ronald Carreño from Pixabay

   

Calling all real estate developers, building owners, and facilities directors, on behalf of my fellow editors at Building Design+Construction, I’d like to invite you – or the appropriate member of your organization – to participate in a short but valuable survey: “What Building Owners + Developers Want from Their Design and Construction Project Teams.”

This survey is for an editorial research project by the BD+C editors that will be published in the February 2021 issue of BD+C, with extended coverage online at BDCnetwork.com throughout February and March. 

PLEASE NOTE: This is NOT a solicitation for sponsorship. There is no cost to your organization.

The survey takes about 3 minutes. By participating, you will gain several exclusive benefits:
• You will get all the data – at no cost – before it is published, without having to register. Others will have to register and pay a fee to get all the data.
• You will discover the most crucial criteria for selecting architects, construction firms, and specialty subcontractors for your projects.
• You will gain insight about the most popular strategies real estate owners and developers are using to achieve building operating efficiency, sustainability, and occupier wellness.
• You will learn how other real estate organizations have responded to the COVID-19 pandemic.

In short, you will gain big ideas and hard data that your organization can use to create even more successful projects in the future.

Your responses will be 100% confidential. All data will be agglomerated for anonymity.

 

 

(Click here to take the survey if the button does not work.)

 

Thanks for your time and valuable input! 

:rob

Robert Cassidy

Executive Editor, Building Design+Construction

Related Stories

Office Buildings | Jan 27, 2015

London plans to build Foggo Associates' 'can of ham' building

The much delayed high-rise development at London’s 60-70 St. Mary Axe resembles a can of ham, and the project's architects are embracing the playful sobriquet.

Multifamily Housing | Jan 22, 2015

Sales of apartment buildings hit record high in 2014

Investors bet big time on demand for rental properties over homeownership in 2014, when sales of apartment buildings hit a record $110.1 billion, or nearly 15% higher than the previous year.

Modular Building | Jan 21, 2015

Chinese company 3D prints six-story multifamily building

The building components were prefabricated piece by piece using a printer that is 7 meters tall, 10 meters wide, and 40 meters long. 

| Jan 21, 2015

Tesla Motors starts construction on $5 billion battery plant in Nevada

Tesla Motors’ “gigafactory,” a $5 billion project on 980 acres in Sparks, Nev., could annually produce enough power for 500,000 electric cars.

| Jan 20, 2015

Daring hotel design scheme takes the shape of cut amethyst stone

The Dutch practice NL Architects designed a proposal for a chain of hotels shaped like a rock cut in half to reveal a gemstone inside. 

| Jan 20, 2015

Avery Associates unveils plans for London's second-tallest tower

The 270-meter tower, dubbed the No. 1 Undershaft, will stand next to the city's "Cheesegrater" building.

| Jan 19, 2015

HAO unveils designs for a 3D movie museum in China

New York-based HAO has released designs for the proposed Bolong 3D Movie Museum & Mediatek in Tianjin.

| Jan 19, 2015

Gaudi’s first work outside Spain will be a chapel in Chile

Nearly 100 years after Antoni Gaudí’s death, Chile will begin constructing a chapel using his designs.

| Jan 19, 2015

Architecture for Humanity closes office, plans to file for bankruptcy

After more than 15 years of work, the nonprofit design group Architecture for Humanity has closed its San Francisco office and plans to file for Chapter 7 bankruptcy protection.

| Jan 17, 2015

When is a train station not a train station? When it’s a performance venue

You can catch a train at Minneapolis’s new Target Field Station. You can also share in an experience. That’s what ‘Open Transit’ is all about.

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category


Resiliency

Austin area evacuation center will double as events venue

A new 45,000 sf FEMA-operated evacuation shelter in the Greater Austin metropolitan area will begin construction this fall. The center will be available to house people in the event of a disaster such as a major hurricane and double as an events venue when not needed for emergency shelter.



halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021