Tag: Büroflächen

  • Office and practice space at Winterthur railway station fully let

    Office and practice space at Winterthur railway station fully let

    Colliers Switzerland has found tenants for the development in the Wartstrasse 2 shopping street in Winterthur. As the commercial property service provider announced in a press release, the Augenarztpraxis am Bahnhof, an architecture firm and the Ecap language school will move into the office property directly next to the railway station.

    Christine Hürzeler and Hans-Georg Geiger offer a full range of diagnostic and preventive examinations for the early detection of eye diseases at the ophthalmological practice at the railway station.

    The Ecap language school has been in existence since 1970, initially focussing on courses in metal and mechanical engineering professions to qualify skilled workers for industrial companies. Today, the focus is on further training for migrants.

    The office property at Wartstrasse 2 was created as part of the redesign of Rudolfstrasse and the new subway at the rear of the railway station. The municipal project aims to revitalise the neighbourhood streets and strengthen the character of the centre. The rental properties were offered in shell form. They extend over an area of 1860 square metres and five storeys. The smallest unit measures 62 square metres, while the largest offers 366 square metres of office and practice space.

  • Key interest rate trend revives property market

    Key interest rate trend revives property market

    The Swiss property market continues to prove resilient despite challenges, CSL Immobilien explains in a press release accompanying its 2025 property market report. Macroeconomic uncertainties and increasing regulatory requirements are cited as such. On the other hand, the gradual reduction in key interest rates by the Swiss National Bank had a positive effect on market dynamics.

    In the rental property market, CSL Immobilien continued to see strong demand in the past year with a shortage of supply. As a result, asking rents rose significantly faster than existing rents and the vacancy rate fell to a record low, according to the press release. Due to the particularly sharp rise in asking rents in cities such as Zurich and Geneva, households are increasingly moving to urban centres with good transport links.

    Prices for residential property also continued to rise last year. According to CSL Immobilien’s surveys, prices in the Zurich economic area rose particularly sharply.

    The office market developed differently in 2024. The supply of available space in the conurbations increased, while rental prices in the periphery fell. In the city centres, on the other hand, rents rose as the supply of space continued to fall. In general, there was increased demand for ESG-compliant office space and flexible utilisation concepts.

    CSL Immobilien anticipates moderate but solid further growth for the current year. “Investors who remain agile and adapt their strategies will be able to successfully capitalise on opportunities in 2025,” Thomas Walter, CEO of CSL Immobilien, is quoted as saying in the press release.

  • New requirements for office space

    New requirements for office space

    The way in which companies utilise their office space has changed significantly in recent years. As the “Office Space Barometer” survey shows, workstations for individual desk work are no longer the central focus, which is understandable given the average occupancy rate of around 72%. Instead, companies are prioritising spaces that enable both collaboration and concentrated work. Meeting rooms, customer areas as well as relaxation and retreat areas are becoming increasingly important. Traditional open-plan offices are giving way to flexible space concepts that meet the diverse needs of employees.

    City or conurbation?
    Although around 24% of the companies surveyed still prefer a city centre location, locations in conurbations are also increasingly in demand due to good transport links and attractive rental prices. In large centres, as many as 53% of companies prefer a central location. The modern infrastructure enables companies to save costs outside the centres without having to accept losses in accessibility.

    Quality and sustainability as key criteria
    When choosing new office space, the quality of the working environment is the top priority. 59% of companies rate high-quality and ergonomically equipped workplaces as very important, while 37% rate this as somewhat important. Aspects such as sustainable construction and energy-efficient operation are becoming increasingly important, as they not only help to reduce costs but also support companies’ sustainability goals. Mobility factors such as good public transport connections or accessibility by car are also crucial.

    Efficient use of space through data-based strategies
    The fluctuating utilisation of office space poses challenges for many companies and owners. More and more companies are turning to technologies such as automated counting systems to analyse the actual use of office space. This data provides valuable insights and enables flexible customisation of the working environment. By transforming underutilised spaces into communal and meeting areas, space utilisation can be maximised and operating costs reduced while promoting employee wellbeing.

  • Marketplace for commercial property

    Marketplace for commercial property

    Maison (Schweiz) AG has raised a “substantial six-figure sum” in a financing round, the company specialising in the marketing of office and commercial space announced in a post on LinkedIn. The financing of the maison.work marketplace has thus been secured, it continues. The funds raised will be channelled into “technological advances, marketing initiatives and the expansion of the core team”.

    Maison (Schweiz) AG, based in Zurich, has been active in the marketing of office and commercial space for five years . The maison.work marketplace was launched in August last year. Commercial properties ranging from offices, coworking spaces and shared offices to production facilities, warehouses and retail space are offered here.

  • Manor moves into the Jelmoli building

    Manor moves into the Jelmoli building

    In February 2023, Swiss Prime Site decided to remodel and sustainably develop the Jelmoli building. The aim is to adapt the retail space to current market requirements and make the building fit for the future. In Manor, Swiss Prime Site has now found a long-term tenant that will ensure the long-term attractiveness of the building and the lower Bahnhofstrasse.

    An inspiring shopping experience in the heart of Zurich
    Manor will rent around 13,000 square metres of space and is expected to take over the ground floor, basement and first floor in 2027. Manor will open a flagship store here, which will be directly accessible from Sihlstrasse and Seidengasse. Roland Armbruster, CEO of Manor, promises an inspiring shopping experience with a varied and curated product range in the areas of fashion, beauty, home and living. A diverse range of restaurants will round off the shopping experience.

    New office space and restaurants
    Following the renovation, the upper floors of the Jelmoli building will offer around 20,000 m² of office space, providing a new top address in Zurich city centre. This office space will be complemented by a wide range of catering and leisure facilities. The newly designed roof terrace will provide additional space for catering outlets.

    Partnership between Swiss Prime Site and Manor
    The long-term rental agreement between Swiss Prime Site and Manor is a significant step for both companies. Manor will also contribute to the investments for the remodelling in order to create attractive retail space. Existing tenancy agreements, in particular with the Holmes Place fitness club, will remain in place during and after the renovation. Holmes Place will continue to offer its services to customers during the renovation phase. With Manor and Holmes Place, around half of the space has therefore already been let before the start of construction.

    A unique meeting place for Zurich
    René Zahnd, CEO of Swiss Prime Site, emphasises: “Our primary goal was to preserve the Jelmoli building as a unique destination and open meeting place. With the arrival of the Manor department stores’ group and its long-standing tradition, the Jelmoli building will be filled with new life for Zurich and the Zurich population and will shine beyond the city limits.”

    The largest department stores’ group in Switzerland
    Manor, the largest department stores’ group in Switzerland, is represented in all parts of the country and employs around 7,500 people. The Manor Group comprises 59 Manor department stores, 27 Manor Food supermarkets and 23 Manora restaurants. The company pursues an omnichannel strategy that combines online shops and services. Manor is sustainably profitable and is part of Maus Frères Holding, which also owns leading lifestyle brands such as Lacoste.

    The repositioning of the Jelmoli building with the arrival of Manor marks an important step for the future of Zurich’s Bahnhofstrasse and emphasises the importance of Swiss Prime Site in sustainable urban development.

  • Innovation centre expands its services

    Innovation centre expands its services

    Startup & Innovation Space AG is expanding the offering of its start-up centre Home of Innovation. The plans include “more office space and co-working spaces, more training for founders and new access to investor funds”, Home of Innovation announced in a press release. The centre, which currently operates at three locations, is currently used by around 100 start-ups, innovative SMEs and co-workers as well as five Winterthur business associations. Home of Innovation has developed a strategy with five strategic themes for the expansion of Winterthur’s innovation ecosystem.

    The aim is to acquire additional office space of at least 2,000 square metres in Winterthur. In addition to attracting existing companies, a second focus will be placed on start-ups. They are to be supported by the establishment of a project manager position to promote start-ups. In addition, Home of Innovation intends to strengthen its already successful Launch Control training and support programme. Last but not least, investors and start-ups are to be brought together as part of the Winti-Ventures initiative.

    In preparation for the next phase of growth, Home of Innovation is also making changes to its management. Thomas Giger has been appointed Chairman of the Board of Directors, while Thomas Breitenmoser will head up operations as Head of Operations. Founder and initiator of Home of Innovation, Raphael Tobler, is stepping down as Chairman of the Board of Directors, but will remain with the start-up centre as Vice Chairman with a focus on Launch Control.

  • Three companies move into QUBO

    Three companies move into QUBO

    QUBO welcomes three new companies. CES Bauingenieur AG, werkunion and Orfida Treuhand + Revisions AG moved into the Obwalden work centre in March. QUBO consists of two interconnected buildings and is owned by Obwaldner Kantonalbank(OKB), the Eberli Group, Orfida and werkunion. OKB has set up its Innovation Lab on the top floor of the new QUBO 17 building. The Eberli Group moved into its remodelled and expanded headquarters in the existing QUBO 15 building in January.

    Orfida Treuhand + Revisions AG moved into the Obwalden workspace at the beginning of March, coinciding with the company’s 40th anniversary. “The move to QUBO is more than just a change of location,” reads a corresponding press release from QUBO. “The modern and innovatively designed office space offers optimal working conditions that not only increase Orfida’s attractiveness as an employer, but also bring a ‘super flow’ to the team.”

    With werkunion moving in, all five companies of the umbrella brand will find a new home in Sarnen. In future, general planning, architecture, interior design, specialist planning and brand design will all operate in QUBO. “We are proud to be part of this pioneering project and look forward to breaking new ground together with everyone at QUBO and shaping the future of entrepreneurship in Obwalden,” said Roli Scherer, architect and head of werkunion, in a further press release from QUBO.

    The new trio of tenants is completed by CES Bauingenieur AG. Headquartered in Nidwalden, the company has also been represented in Sarnen since 1983. According to the press release, CES Bauingenieur AG intends to offer its employees an attractive office structure and culture at QUBO.

  • Reversal in office availability and further polarization between downtown and suburbs

    Reversal in office availability and further polarization between downtown and suburbs

    As of the end of June, office space available across Switzerland within three months rose for the second consecutive quarter to 1.67 million sqm, or 3.5% of the stock (see Figure 1), after reaching a multi-year low of 3.2% in Q4 2022. This is mainly due to an additional supply of office space in the suburbs of Zurich (airport region and Limmattal), where the availability rate rose from 15% to 16.6% within the six-month period. On Zurich city land, office supply also rose to 190,000 sq m or 2.8%, 13,000 sq m more than in Q1 2023 (177,000 sq m or 2.7%) and the first increase since Q4 2020 (see Figure 2). Especially in Zurich’s CBD (Central Business District), supply increased by 8,000 sqm to 51,000 sqm (2.6 %) within three months.

    In Zurich, it is noticeable that some companies in the information and communications technology (ICT) sector, which accounted for a large share of demand in recent years, have reviewed or revised their expansion plans. In addition, the merger of the two largest Swiss banks, UBS and Credit Suisse, will also gradually have an impact on the Zurich office market. Although this impact is not expected to be significant, it could create good opportunities for other market participants to find centrally located space in a still tight market environment with low construction activity and upward pressure on prime rents.
    Furthermore, it is noticeable that the increase in available office space in the city of Basel has turned into a reduction in supply for the first time since 2016. Some major leasing successes in the CBD and Klybeck have led to a reduction in the availability rate from 5.6% to 4.5% (117,000 m2) within one quarter. However, a significant rebound in supply is expected in the medium term.

    Otherwise, the office space markets in the other Swiss cities of Geneva, Bern and Lausanne are proving stable and thus unimpressed by the slowdown in economic growth. The Swiss office market has benefited from high take-up in recent years, with good economic growth even more than offsetting the impact of home working. However, office demand has recently slowed due to the weakening economy, and subletting activity has also increased. Office take-up in the first half of 2023 is down 28% from the first half of 2022 to an average of 490,000 sq m per quarter and is expected to remain at this lower level in the second half of 2023, which is roughly in line with the long-term average (see Figure 3).

  • Another location for start-ups is being created in the greater Zurich area

    Another location for start-ups is being created in the greater Zurich area

    As a first step, Elektron AG is making around 1,100 square meters available to the Wädenswil start-up organization grow . Two fast-growing life science start-ups will move in there: Araris Biotech AG , a spin-off from the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology Zurich ( ETH ) and the Paul Scherrer Institute ( PSI ), and Nemis Technologies AG . This is already a fourth location for ambitious young companies in the local area of Wädenswil.

    The technology company Elektron will finance the conversion to laboratory and office space. “The cooperation with grow fits perfectly with our philosophy of combining modern technologies and sustainability,” Elektron CEO Enrico Baumann is quoted as saying in a statement from grow. “For us, the settlement of the two start-ups is an investment in the future and a commitment to the Wädenswil workplace.”

    Araris Biotech is researching novel anti-cancer antibody compounds. Nemis develops diagnostic solutions to detect pathogenic bacteria in food. Both have completed successful financing rounds. Araris was able to earn over 15 million francs in October 2020, Nemis only recently 7.75 million francs.

    “In the past five years, growth has accelerated significantly,” says Wädenswil Mayor Philipp Kutter. He is also a member of the board of trustees of grow. Despite the corona pandemic, there are signs of further growth, “which is extremely positive for research and business in and around Wädenswil”.

  • New innovative business park in Altstetten

    New innovative business park in Altstetten

    Glass, metal and exposed concrete – the new commercial property Manufakt 8048 was created as a minimalist blank and at the same time a prototype for sustainable service and production facilities.

    With the concept and the brand "Manufakt", the real estate developer Steiner AG wants to offer more utility with less resource consumption. Manufactory 8048 has various “shared spaces” – common areas such as reception areas, meeting rooms or meeting areas. This reduces the direct room costs and the operating costs for additional areas. This should also attract young companies.

    The office building manages without load-bearing walls and thus offers a flexible spatial grid. In addition, Steiner AG has designed "room boxes" for individual workstations, which can be put together in modules if required.
    The new tenants in Altstetten are currently in the process of individually designing their floor plans as part of the tenant fit-out and converting the up to 4.5 m high rooms into production and office areas, laboratories and showrooms.

    The design of the building in Altstetten was developed and planned by Theo Hotz Partner Architekten. Although Theo Hotz (1928-2018) was considered one of the best-known high-tech architects in Switzerland during his lifetime, the Manufactory 8048 was designed as a "low-tech" building: the building technology and the standard of construction are minimal, the structural details are simple. The clear design language of the building results from a simple cubic outline with six floors. These can be recognized from the outside by continuous glazed ribbon windows and horizontal aluminum parapets. In the building, industrial
    tial materials such as steel, exposed concrete and seamless industrial floors together with exposed installations.

    In the center of the building is an airy atrium, which serves as an open inner courtyard for access and becomes an attraction, meeting point and relaxation area. The liveliness in the inner courtyard is supported by greenery, which is intended to contribute to a positive climate. Lifts and cantilevered arcades lead from the inner courtyard to the floors.

    In Wädenswil and Winterthur, two more industrial parks will be built in the coming years based on the Manufakt concept. An important element is the networking of the various tenants across the locations.

  • Swiss Prime Site Immobilien enters into a partnership with Superlab Suisse

    Swiss Prime Site Immobilien enters into a partnership with Superlab Suisse

    Laboratory and research space provider soon with locations in Basel and Schlieren
    The company Superlab Suisse, which already operates a location in Lausanne, provides operational and fully equipped research and laboratory space ("Lab as a Service"). The offer also includes operating services and other important services. Swiss Prime Site Immobilien and Superlab Suisse are planning to develop locations in Basel and Schlieren with a total area of over 10,000 m2 from 2022. The Stücki Park in Basel already houses a laboratory building and a technology park in which various life science start-ups come together. Right next door, another state-of-the-art building with laboratory and research areas is to be built by Superlab Suisse over the next 18 months. The second location is planned in Schlieren near the city of Zurich. The Limmattal is the seat of the Swiss Federal Institute of Technology (ETH), the University of Zurich (UZH) and research centers of numerous national and international pharmaceutical companies. There is correspondingly strong demand for laboratory space. Swiss Prime Site Immobilien is planning a modern new building project on the JED site in Schlieren. In cooperation with Superlab Suisse, research and laboratory areas for start-ups, spin-offs or established companies are to be created on two floors. «We are very pleased about the cooperation with Swiss Prime Site for the two upcoming locations in Basel and Zurich, the two most important life science clusters in Switzerland. Due to the direct proximity to the Wagi area in Schlieren and the technology park in Basel, companies from the life sciences sector can benefit from significant synergy effects of these ecosystems," says Zhang Xi, CEO of Superlab.

    Great strides are being made towards making the areas more flexible .
    The demand for flexible office and commercial space has been increasing for years. The market trend towards making rental space more flexible for other types of use is also steadily increasing. Swiss Prime Site Immobilien recognized this early on and successfully implemented it through the development projects YOND in Zurich and JED in Schlieren (existing buildings). Martin Kaleja, CEO of Swiss Prime Site Immobilien: “The key success factors are the modern standard of construction, the flexibility of the space and the guarantee of support and services. As with other areas that have already been made more flexible, the needs of our customers are also in the foreground in the Life Science area.» Swiss Prime Site Immobilien and Superlab Suisse together have the necessary know-how to ensure the space required in the laboratory and research area. While Superlab Suisse provides its innovative platform, Swiss Prime Site Immobilien manages the necessary
    Real estate knowledge and related development resources. Martin Kaleja, CEO of Swiss Prime Site Immobilien, once again: “We are very pleased to have found the perfect partner for making laboratory and research areas more flexible and scaling in Superlab Suisse. While Superlab Suisse contributes the 'software', we have the right knowledge of the real estate market, the knowledge of what our customers want
    and thus provide the 'hardware' in this partnership.»

  • Westhive is expanding on the right bank of Lake Zurich

    Westhive is expanding on the right bank of Lake Zurich

    According to a press release , Westhive AG has a new station in Zollikon on the right side of Lake Zurich. The new presence will be operated jointly with Walde Immobilien AG , which is based there, as a seventh location. With the new presence, the range of flexible rentable office space for teams and companies that want to do business in the region is growing. The provider of office solutions thus has over 1,100 workstations with a complete service infrastructure.

    The new location offers office space for two or three people and can be combined to form larger units. Workplaces on the upper floors are characterized by a “spectacular view of the lake and mountains,” it says.

    The area also owes its attractiveness to a “generous garden with a shady arcade” for meetings outdoors. In addition, a bistro with a terrace can be used as an addition to the ten existing meeting rooms. A parking garage and the proximity to public transport also enhance the location.

    Searchers can now express their interest in the new location. Westhive promises to continue its expansion course. Additional office space is planned in Stettbach in March and in Basel and Zug in late summer.

  • Early contract extension with the main tenant of the Escher-Wyss area

    Early contract extension with the main tenant of the Escher-Wyss area

    Allreal acquired the Escher-Wyss-Areal in 2002 and has been MAN ever since
    Energy Solutions Schweiz AG (“MAN”) the main customer on the 38,362 square
    meter plot of land in Zurich-West with a usable area of around
    87,000 square meters.

    The long-term partnership between MAN and Allreal is being continued,
    in which the lease, which expired on December 31, 2023, was prematurely extended by five years to at least December 31, 2028 under the same conditions as before. This involves around 32,000 square meters of commercial and storage space and around 11,500 square meters of office space.

    This means that the Escher-Wyss-Areal will continue to be the largest private industrial site in the future.
    location in the city of Zurich. According to the 2021 semi-annual report, MAN is one of Allreal’s five largest tenants, accounting for 6% of total rental income from commercial properties.

  • The ground floor is used correctly

    The ground floor is used correctly

    Ground floor locations in major Swiss cities and medium-sized centers, but also in smaller communities, are increasingly leading a bleak existence – at least away from the coveted prime locations. According to real estate market experts, there has been a clear functional change in this type of land use not just since the Covid 19 pandemic. Where there used to be a restaurant, a café or a hairdresser, a butcher or an owner-managed fashion store, today there is a yawning emptiness in many places.

    In the focus of science
    Nicole Hartmann, research assistant at the Institute for Interior Design (IIA) at the Lucerne University of Applied Sciences and Arts (HSLU), is currently working on the possibilities of converting this very special type of building space. With her colleagues Markus Gmünder, Christoph Hanisch and Katharina Kleczka, she is currently looking at the “question of the conversion of the ground floor from the inside out” in her “PARTERRE” project. Hartmann says: "Ground floor zones are an important part of buildings, but also of the cityscape." However, restructuring processes in the industry and the growth of online trading have recently brought about a change in the function of the ground floor locations. Social and cultural shifts in values as well as legal framework conditions also played a role in the subject, according to Hartmann. The project team collected very specific practical examples in the Portuguese city of Porto, where, thanks to new ideas and innovations, city quarters could be revitalized with SMEs and start-ups. Or recently in the city of Lucerne, where currently pronounced vacancies and unused business and retail space are visible and omnipresent due to the lack of international tourists.

    One solution: pop-up shops
    The company founding pop-up shops by founder and managing director Chalid A. El Ashker is committed to precisely such vacancies. With his “online marketplace” he has free space in Baden, Brugg and Dietikon on offer. The internet platform of the start-up based in Zollikon brings providers of free retail and promotional space together with those interested in renting space for a limited period of time. Even the rental agreement and rent payments are processed online in pop-up shops. Target groups are landlords with vacant space on the one hand and new innovative brands, companies, designers or artists on the other hand who need space to display their products. “Regardless of the type of space – we optimize the letting process,” says El Ashker, whose business idea does not stop at the Swiss borders. He also lists international business spaces, for example in Germany, the UK or the USA, many of them on the ground floor of a building. For the start-up founder, his platform has several advantages: "We increase the availability of retail space and promote the local economy by supporting new, emerging and established companies." In Switzerland, pop-up shops are already working with customers such as SBB, Swiss Post, Migros, SPG Intercity and Wincasa.

    Flexible office space close to where you live
    But retail solutions are not the only option for vacant commercial space on the ground floor of Swiss municipalities and cities. This type of commercial space can, for example, be converted into office space depending on the requirements of the administration and depending on the definition of the urban zone. The Village Office company offers one of the new German “coworking space” concepts. It is aiming to create several hundred flexibly rentable coworking spaces throughout Switzerland. There are currently more than 80 federal “coworking spaces” from Village Office in the country – for example in Aarau, Bottighofen, Frauenfeld, Lucerne or in Laax, Nyon and Davos.

    Conceived and founded as a cooperative, it wants to promote new forms of work and build up a whole network of “coworking spaces”. "In doing so, we are also creating bridges between communities, companies, property owners and coworkers," says Jenny Schäpper-Uster, who co-founded the new branch association Coworking Switzerland in 2015 and 2016 and village offices on the other. “Our vision is that by 2030 every person in Switzerland will reach the next 'coworking space' within 15 minutes. In this way, we relieve the traffic infrastructure, increase local added value and improve the quality of life with shorter commutes. "

    «Revitalizing inner cities»
    Interior designer Nicole Hartmann from HSLU brings into play another option for converting vacant ground floor areas in inner-city areas: living space. "Depending on the existing floor plans, room heights, window fronts and surface types, the focus should be on an actual revitalization of the inner cities," she said. This could then also mean making old towns attractive, liveable and worth living in again for new residents. In many places in Switzerland, people have been displaced in peripheral zones or in agglomerations because contemporary and modern floor plans may have been created in new neighborhoods. "A discussion about new mixed uses and the redefinition of public zones could initiate a new trend and revitalize many city centers and inner cities," Hartmann is convinced.

    This is exactly what the current “PARTERRE” project aims to investigate. It is also about the question of how a change of use affects the quality of life and amenity of the city dwellers and how the interfaces between public city life and private living can be designed. "The project takes into account the entire structure of effects with the interests of the various actors and develops a sustainable and future-oriented conversion strategy for vacant ground floors," says Hartmann. We can already look forward to your project results.

    The city of Baden – a positive example
    Baden, the third largest municipality in the canton of Aargau with over 19,000 inhabitants, is one of the top 5 of Switzerland's 110 economic regions. Around 2500 companies are based here, including many international companies. Thanks to the connection to the local and long-distance transport networks and the distance of only around 20 kilometers to Zurich, the canton capital Aarau and the city of Waldshut-Tiengen in Germany, it is a regional economic center and also a popular place to live.

    So it is not surprising that location promoter Thomas Lütolf can report a very low vacancy rate in the inner-city retail space: "Of 220 spaces, only three are currently empty." This means that the vacancy rate on the city's ground floor is lower than it has been in six years – despite the ongoing corona pandemic. A trend that he sees in the retail space is the increased use by gastronomy and food concepts. The retail stores also showed new concepts and tried-and-tested products: for example, Ohne.ch on Stadtturmstrasse 15 offers fair and sustainable food unpackaged. In addition, the Sprüngli confectionery chain, which is well-known and popular across national borders, was able to move into the Baden train station.

    And when it comes to pop-up stores, too, Lütolf sees more opportunities than risks: "Pop-up shops are not unknown in Baden." In his opinion, this trend will hold up in the long term and whether the active art and cultural scene in the city will be able to quickly and easily use the areas that have become free. Only when it comes to rent levels does it show a slight downward trend. "But that in turn makes it interesting for other groups of providers in this usage segment," says Lütolf. (mr).

  • Locatee expands to New York

    Locatee expands to New York

    The Zurich-based company Locatee now has a second headquarters in New York. The team working there is intended to support American companies with immediate effect in planning their actual office space requirements. Because the office landscape will look completely different after the pandemic than before, it is necessary to get a clear picture of the actual occupancy and occupancy, according to a media release .

    This expansion in the US is another step towards becoming the global leader in workplace analysis. This analysis leverages the existing wired and wireless networks on site to determine exactly how effectively a company's office space is being used. This makes it possible to enlarge or reduce as needed.

    “We know that large companies often have difficulty identifying exactly how their real estate portfolio is being used,” says Locatee CEO Thomas Kessler. “And this leads to enormous costs in the form of wasted space. We want to help companies manage their real estate portfolio effectively. "

    Locatee was founded in 2014. In 2016, Swiss Post was the first company to use Locatee in all properties. Today, according to Locatee, its platform is used by companies such as Deloitte , Swiss Re and other of the world's 1000 most valuable companies in more than 60 countries.