Tag: Franken

  • Binding Prize for Biodiversity 2023 awarded to eco-neighbourhood in Lausanne

    Binding Prize for Biodiversity 2023 awarded to eco-neighbourhood in Lausanne

    The “Pra Roman” site development by the Codha cooperative and the “Sur le Pra” association won the Binding Prize for Biodiversity 2023 because the development takes on the ecological and social networking functions for the neighbourhood and the city in an extremely exemplary manner and the project was approached in a participatory manner from the very beginning. The 2023 prize was announced as part of the annual theme “groundbreaking site developments”.

    Ecologically networked living spaces
    The “Pra Roman” housing estate with twelve apartment buildings on an area of 22,000 square metres is located on the outskirts of Lausanne. The surrounding area was integrated into the planning and construction of the 2020 development in an exemplary manner. For example, the award-winner created alternating humid wildlife corridors with integrated small structures for amphibians and small mammals and to promote wild plants. This awareness of taking responsibility for ecological connectivity in a larger system is central to the promotion of biodiversity in the settlement area.

    Involving residents in planning
    Raising residents’ awareness of biodiversity promotion was an important part of the “Pra Roman” project from the very beginning. Codha, the developer and cooperative for non-profit housing, initiated the association “Sur le Pra” at the beginning of the planning phase and developed a participatory process. Future residents met early on for site tours or nature observations and, with a high degree of design freedom, designed their near-natural outdoor spaces in workshops, which they later realised independently. The building owner supported them financially.

    Vegetable garden enables encounter and sensitisation
    One of these green spaces is the community vegetable garden. Here people exchange ideas and get to know nature as a basis for life. The culture of sustainable living and land use runs like a thread through the entire “Pra Roman” project. The surrounding ecosystems are observed, imitated in their diversity and connected with the settlement area.

    “We are convinced that this excellent example will encourage other real estate developers to think about biodiversity at an early stage and involve many people,” says Peter Lehmann, vice president of the jury for the award.

    Recognition prize goes to the Areal Bach project in St. Gallen
    In addition to the main prize, the Foundation also awards a recognition prize of 25,000 Swiss francs for smaller sites. The Areal Bach, an interim use near the St.Fiden railway station in St.Gallen, receives this prize because it impressively demonstrates the potential of the many fallow areas in the cities. With its perseverance and commitment, the Areal Bach association overcame resistance, seized the opportunity and, together with the population, ecologically upgraded the areas and revitalised them with creative ideas. It has managed to get many stakeholders on board to realise a jointly supported, multifaceted project. A temporary green oasis was created from a non-place, which can lay the foundations for biodiversity and quality of stay for the planning of a future area development.

  • Window manufacturer 4B achieves highest net sales in its history

    Window manufacturer 4B achieves highest net sales in its history

    The window and façade manufacturer 4B, headquartered in Hochdorf, achieved the highest net sales in its company history in the 2022 business year. Despite a slightly lower order volume of 191 million Swiss francs, the traditional company was able to increase net sales by 14.7 per cent to 204.2 million Swiss francs, according to a media release.

    According to the statement, 4B’s supply chains proved to be “pleasingly crisis-resistant” even in times of an “extremely difficult geopolitical situation” due to the Ukraine war. The reason for this is the company’s focus on suppliers from Switzerland and nearby European countries.

    This ensured a high level of supply security, prevented production stoppages and “positively mastered the 2022 business year”, CEO Jean-Marc Devaud is quoted as saying. He did not provide any information on profits.

    Furthermore, the company invested more in 2022. Thus, investment activities increased by 45.5 per cent to 4.8 million Swiss francs. By commissioning new equipment, it was able to reduce the time it takes to produce an order by more than two days.

    It also reportedly made progress in the areas of digitalisation and automation. Instead of paper folders, employees now use iPads on construction sites. This allows them to organise building inspections more efficiently. Quotations for window renovations can also be calculated more quickly and easily during the first consultation.

    In addition, the company moved into its eleventh location in 2022. It is located in Wallisellen ZH. At the end of 2022, 4B employed 703 people in Switzerland.

  • Zurich Cantonal Council approves credit for new UZH centre

    Zurich Cantonal Council approves credit for new UZH centre

    The Zurich Cantonal Council has approved the property loan for the new FORUM UZH education and research centre. The loan is estimated at 598 million Swiss francs, minus 1.3 million Swiss francs for art in construction, according to a media release. The new building is to become the most important central location of the University of Zurich in the centre of the city.

    As a modern counterpart to the historic main building, the FORUM UZH is of “central importance” for the future development of the university, the UZH said. “The cantonal council has made a forward-looking decision so that Zurich’s higher education area can continue to develop,” Michael Schaepman, rector of UZH, is quoted as saying in the statement.

    The new building will create 37,000 square metres of urgently needed additional space for research and teaching an increasing number of students. More than 700 student workplaces are planned. A total of 6000 people will be able to study, research and work on nine floors.

    The space concept according to plans by architects Herzog & de Meuron is to correspond to the latest forms of learning and teaching and offer ideal conditions for exchange between teaching staff, researchers and students. The design of the lecture halls, for example, is much more strongly oriented towards cooperation and group work than before. Modern workplaces for research are also planned.

    The next step for UZH is to prepare a building application. It plans to submit it to the city of Zurich in autumn. If planning permission is granted by spring 2024, construction can begin in autumn 2024. Completion is planned for the end of 2029.

  • Fundamenta Real Estate reports strong operating result

    Fundamenta Real Estate reports strong operating result

    According to a media release, the real estate company Fundamenta Real Estate in Zug increased its operating result in 2022 and maintained the value of its real estate portfolio at over CHF 1 billion. This billion mark had been exceeded for the first time at the end of 2021. It now stands at 1216.4 million francs, according to the annual report for 2022, 10.7 per cent higher than the previous year.

    Fundamenta Real Estate’s operating result rose by 12.4 percent to CHF 19.9 million. Net profit, also due to positive revaluation effects, was CHF 22.3 million. Net actual rental income increased by 10 percent to 40.9 million Swiss francs and thus exceeded the 40 million mark for the first time. In the previous year, it was 37.2 million francs. The company also points to a record low vacancy rate of only 1.6 per cent compared to 2.5 per cent in 2021. This and the acquisition of six existing properties, the completion of a development project and its transfer to the portfolio had contributed to the high net actual rental income.

    After the share price had increased by a total of 26.7 percent in the two previous years, it fell by 17.2 percent to CHF 16.10 (previous year: CHF 19.45) in the reporting period due to market conditions. The market capitalisation at the end of the year was 484 million Swiss francs compared to 584.7 million a year earlier.

    For the 2022 business year, the Board of Directors will again propose a distribution of CHF 0.55 per share at the Annual General Meeting on 5 April, as in the previous year. The entire Board of Directors (BoD) will stand for re-election at the Annual General Meeting. Board member Herbert Stoop has announced that he will not stand for re-election at the 2024 general meeting.

  • Federal Council wants to further strengthen the competitiveness of Swiss SMEs and regions

    Federal Council wants to further strengthen the competitiveness of Swiss SMEs and regions

    With the Dispatch on Location Promotion 2024-2027, the Federal Council is further developing the strategic foundations of federal location promotion. It is pursuing the following five goals with location promotion in the years 2024-2027: Improve the framework conditions for SMEs, strengthen regions, contribute to sustainable development, exploit the opportunities of digitalisation and strengthen the attractiveness of the business and tourism location. Compared to the period 2020-2023, the importance of sustainable development and digitalisation will be upgraded. In addition, location promotion will be geared even more strongly to the needs of the main target groups – SMEs and regions. In order to implement the goals, 23 concrete activities will be defined in the coming years by SECO and the mandated organisations (guarantee cooperatives, Swiss Export Risk Insurance, Swiss Association for Hotel Credit, Switzerland Tourism, Switzerland Global Enterprise). Some of them are implemented in cooperation with the cantons and other partners.

    The focal points of location promotion
    In SME policy, the focus is on expanding EasyGov.swiss, the one-stop shop of the Confederation, cantons and municipalities for businesses. This can make a significant contribution to reducing the administrative burden on businesses. In the period 2024-2027, the scope of EasyGov services is to be further expanded in order to meet the needs of businesses for additional electronic government services. As part of the expansion of EasyGov, it is planned, for example, to be able to offer businesses a bundled process for moving companies (change of address) in the future. Further expansion is also planned in the area of aliens law notifications and permits for businesses.

    In tourism policy, the focus is on the further development of investment promotion, sustainable development and the digital transformation of tourism. Another priority for the years 2024-2027 is the implementation of the recovery programme for Swiss tourism to counteract the effects of the Covid 19 pandemic.

    The New Regional Policy NRP will enter its third eight-year multi-annual period (2024-2031) in 2024. The existing thematic funding priorities of “industry” and “tourism” will be continued. In addition to digitalisation, sustainable development and the “local economy”, which complements the export orientation of the NRP, will be given particular weight as cross-cutting themes.

    Finally, the offer of support for the export industry, for example in relation to trade-related issues, and in particular access for Swiss exporters to large foreign infrastructure projects, will be further developed in line with demand and the “Team Switzerland” approach will be expanded. For example, various associations, federal offices, Switzerland Global Enterprise and Swiss Export Risk Insurance are increasingly conducting joint promotional activities abroad. These are aimed, among others, at general contractors who carry out large infrastructure projects. Further business opportunities are being identified in important markets.

    Commitment credits and payment frameworks
    In order to continue and further develop the instruments of location promotion, the Federal Council is proposing commitment credits and payment frameworks totalling CHF 428.83 million to parliament for the years 2024-2027. For the years 2020-2023, an amount of around CHF 399 million was available. In addition, there is a payment framework for the creation of the Regional Development Fund in the years 2024-2031 amounting to CHF 217.3 million (reduced by CHF 12.7 million compared to the previous period 2016-2023).

    Location promotion is implemented using the instruments of SME policy, tourism policy, the New Regional Policy (NRP) and foreign trade promotion.

  • Credit Suisse lowers distribution for real estate funds

    Credit Suisse lowers distribution for real estate funds

    Credit Suisse Funds AG expects a reduction in the net asset value of its Credit Suisse Real Estate Fund International (CS REF International). The background to this is developments in the global target markets on which the real estate fund is based, Credit Suisse informs in a statement. Here, rising interest rates in the key markets of the US, UK and Germany have impacted valuations.

    In concrete terms, the fund’s net asset value will fall to between CHF 960 and CHF 970 as of the reporting date at the end of 2022. As at year-end 2021, a net asset value of 1070.72 was recorded. By year-end 2022, Credit Suisse Funds AG has accepted redemption requests amounting to 13.3 percent of the units issued.

    As a result of the expected reduction in the net asset value of 9.5 to 10.5 percent, the major Zurich bank is adjusting the distribution on CS REF International. For 2022, the distribution is to be 35 to 38 francs per unit. In the previous year, 40 francs per unit were distributed.

  • EY attests GZA efficient location marketing

    EY attests GZA efficient location marketing

    The consulting company EY certifies that the GZA and its partners in the member cantons make a positive contribution to the qualitative and sustainable development of the Zurich economic area. This is the conclusion of the third analysis by EY on the activities of the GZA in the years 2018 to 2021.

    According to this analysis and a corresponding media release by GZA, 445 companies from abroad were settled in the Greater Zurich Area during the period mentioned as a result of GZA's location marketing. You created new jobs in 2014. Looking at the entire period analyzed so far since 2009, 9426 new jobs were created directly. According to EY estimates, there were several tens of thousands of jobs indirectly due to so-called multiplier effects.

    EY describes the settlement result as "very sustainable": The survival rate of the directly acquired companies is well above the average of all companies founded in Switzerland.

    From 2018 to 2021, the new settlements brought tax income of CHF 57 million to the Greater Zurich Area. For the period 2009 to 2021, EY calculated tax income of around CHF 647 million, which is offset by total costs of CHF 89 million. This means that every franc invested in location marketing generates around 7.3 francs in additional tax income.

    GZA's proactive and cross-cantonal location marketing has a "positive impact on the development of our common greater Zurich economic area," comments Carmen Walker Späh, President of the GZA Foundation and Zurich Economics Director. That is "very gratifying" because the international competition for the best companies and talents has been fierce for years.

  • Post opens new parcel center in Buchs

    Post opens new parcel center in Buchs

    Swiss Post has opened a new regional parcel center in Buchs. According to a press release , the company has invested around 15 million francs in the necessary conversion of a warehouse.

    After 15 months of planning and construction, the logistics center has been in operation since mid-July. Vertical, spiral conveyor belts are used here for the first time at Swiss Post. They save space and "heave the parcels to the sorting machine at a height of almost three meters in just a few seconds".

    In this way, up to 5,000 parcels per hour are sorted, which are posted and delivered in the greater Aarau, Lenzburg, Seetal, Suhrental and Wynental areas. You no longer have to go via the large parcel centers such as Härkingen SO, Frauenfeld and Daillens VD. This shortens transport routes and makes parcel processing faster and more sustainable.

    A total of 175 people are employed in Buchs, of which 60 positions were newly created. Another 100 are to move there from the Aarau letter delivery point in the coming year.

    “Post is an attractive employer in Aargau, employing almost 2,500 people. With the new logistics center, she is committed to our business location, which makes me very happy," Dieter Egli, government councilor and economics director of the canton of Aargau, is quoted as saying in the media release.

    According to Rümlang, Buchs is the second regional parcel center that Post has put into operation this year. The group has opened further regional parcel centers in Vétroz VS, Cadenazzo TI, Untervaz GR and Ostermundigen BE. In recent years, Swiss Post has invested a total of around 250 million francs in expanding its sorting and delivery infrastructure.

  • Tangible assets become indispensable

    Tangible assets become indispensable

    Many are still talking about whether she’s coming – but she’s already here. The turnaround in interest rates has also reached Switzerland. The word turning sounds a bit bigger than what actually happened. It is simply a matter of a change of sign: For the first time in many years, the yields on medium- and long-term Swiss franc bonds are again nominally in positive territory. The same trend can be observed in the euro area and spreads in the peripheral countries are also widening.

    Is the real estate boom coming to an end?
    The reason for the nervousness on the interest rate markets is quickly found. Inflation is rising on both sides of the Atlantic – and now so fast that the US Federal Reserve is now clearly tightening the reins. That’s why everyone is now staring at the European Central Bank (ECB): Will it follow the USA and thus also burden the local economy with higher capital costs? And what would that mean for the Swiss National Bank (SNB)? Are we threatened with an end to the good economic environment and the long-standing real estate and material asset boom?

    Neither nor. Because the situation in Europe is fundamentally different than in the USA. First of all, real interest rates and, in some cases, nominal interest rates have been negative in the euro area and in Switzerland for years. This has never happened in the USA. Negative interest rates, such as those demanded by the ECB and the SNB for deposits for many years, are also unknown in the USA. Just like the negative interest rates for larger sight deposits that are now common here from commercial banks. Second, growth in Europe is structurally weaker than in the US. The American gross domestic product grew by 5.7% last year and even increased by 6.9% in the fourth quarter. This even puts inflation into perspective, which at 7.5% recently reached its highest level in 40 years. Employment in the USA has risen sharply and unemployment is falling. And at the same time, after two years of the pandemic, US citizens are sitting on a lot of money. All of this enables the Fed to fight inflation vigorously.

    Slow rate hikes
    The ECB, on the other hand, is stuck at low interest rates. Even if it did so to curb inflation, there’s no way it can raise rates as quickly and decisively as the Fed. Because the large amount of cheap money that they pumped into the market over the past ten years has increased the debt burden of the EU countries so massively that the central bank not only chokes off the upswing with a rise in interest rates, but also gives their own member states the air to breathe would take. Even the triple-A nation Germany is now stuck in the interest rate trap.

    As a result, the hands of the SNB are largely tied. On the one hand, the franc is stronger against the euro than it has been since January 2015. On the other hand, inflation in Switzerland is currently contained. The economic research center Kof expects consumer prices to rise by 2.0% in 2022 and by 1.3% in 2023. Rising energy costs are having less of an impact on the Swiss economy than the economic areas of the USA and the euro zone, and the strong currency generally has a price-inhibiting effect. If the SNB does not want to take the risk of an even stronger currency, it will have to wait for the ECB’s first interest rate hikes before it can move its key interest rates closer to zero.

    In other words, the monetary policy turnaround is here. But in Europe, including Switzerland, we do it in slow motion. The ECB will scale back its bond-buying programs; it doesn’t have the leeway for large rate hikes. The ECB must and will let inflation run its course for a while. The SNB is unlikely to be under pressure as inflation will remain moderate. It will proceed cautiously with regard to rate hikes.

    Tangible assets remain trumps
    In such an environment, investors are dependent on real assets, the only investments that offer them protection against inflation and prospects for returns. Investments in real estate and other tangible assets are therefore becoming indispensable, and because investment pressure is increasing, prices in the segment are also continuing to rise. What we are witnessing here is not bubble formation. Normal market forces are at work here. Anyone who fears a bubble in the USA can also relax: There, the yield levels for most asset classes – especially on the real estate markets – are structurally higher than in the euro area. This in turn acts as a buffer against rising capital costs. If the Fed is now planning to return to interest rate normality, this is no cause for concern, but rather proof of economic strength.

    We are a long way from that in Europe and in Switzerland. Instead, we must brace ourselves for a phase of persistently low real interest rates. In this environment, which penalizes holding cash and investments that pay nominal interest, equities, real estate and commodities continue to promise the greatest success. Against this background, securities of globally active real estate companies continue to show good prospects. In Switzerland, the real estate market has moved up sharply in terms of prices in recent years. From an economic perspective, however, there is little reason why prices should fall as long as negative real interest rates persist.