1. Thailand’s Elephant Museum reinforces the bond between humans and beasts (BD+C)
"Deforestation devastated that bond between elephants and the Kui people in northeast Thailand’s Surin Province, depriving both of food and medicinal plants. The province also incurred severe droughts. These events displaced the Kui and elephants to surrounding towns, begging for food or working in elephant camps."
2. The Art Gallery of New South Wales expansion will nearly double its exhibition space (BD+C)
"As part of the $344 million project, a new standalone building, designed by SANAA, will be built and connected to the existing Gallery building by an outdoor public art garden. The garden will be accessible 24/7, creating a civic campus on its site overlooking Sydney Harbor."
3. Austin is first major Texas city to adopt wildfire code (BD+C)
"Responding to an increased risk of wildfire, Austin became the first major city in Texas to adopt a code aimed at curbing wildfires."
4. Persuading workers to come back to the office still a tough sell (Bisnow)
"More than six months into the coronavirus pandemic, only about a quarter of office workers have returned to their places of work, a new study has found."
5. Traffic is returning faster to outlet centers than malls; What does that mean for the sector’s future? (National Real Estate Investor)
"Outlet centers have not been spared the pandemic’s toll. But their open-air locations and focus on value are major advantages."
6. Facebook's big augmented reality play could spark new wave of proptech (Bisnow)
"Technologies that people take for granted today, such as smartphones or Google Maps, have fundamentally changed the way the real estate industry does business. The next technology that could transform the industry, multiple proptech experts say, is augmented reality glasses."
Related Stories
Market Data | Mar 29, 2017
Contractor confidence ends 2016 down but still in positive territory
Although all three diffusion indices in the survey fell by more than five points they remain well above the threshold of 50, which signals that construction activity will continue to be one of the few significant drivers of economic growth.
Market Data | Mar 24, 2017
These are the most and least innovative states for 2017
Connecticut, Virginia, and Maryland are all in the top 10 most innovative states, but none of them were able to claim the number one spot.
Market Data | Mar 22, 2017
After a strong year, construction industry anxious about Washington’s proposed policy shifts
Impacts on labor and materials costs at issue, according to latest JLL report.
Market Data | Mar 22, 2017
Architecture Billings Index rebounds into positive territory
Business conditions projected to solidify moving into the spring and summer.
Market Data | Mar 15, 2017
ABC's Construction Backlog Indicator fell to end 2016
Contractors in each segment surveyed all saw lower backlog during the fourth quarter, with firms in the heavy industrial segment experiencing the largest drop.
Market Data | Feb 28, 2017
Leopardo’s 2017 Construction Economics Report shows year-over-year construction spending increase of 4.2%
The pace of growth was slower than in 2015, however.
Market Data | Feb 23, 2017
Entering 2017, architecture billings slip modestly
Despite minor slowdown in overall billings, commercial/ industrial and institutional sectors post strongest gains in over 12 months.
Market Data | Feb 16, 2017
How does your hospital stack up? Grumman/Butkus Associates 2016 Hospital Benchmarking Survey
Report examines electricity, fossil fuel, water/sewer, and carbon footprint.
Market Data | Feb 1, 2017
Nonresidential spending falters slightly to end 2016
Nonresidential spending decreased from $713.1 billion in November to $708.2 billion in December.
Market Data | Jan 31, 2017
AIA foresees nonres building spending increasing, but at a slower pace than in 2016
Expects another double-digit growth year for office construction, but a more modest uptick for health-related building.