Buildings Play a Key Role in Massachusetts’ Energy Future
If we want to maintain momentum on climate goals, we must be strategic in how and when building performance is integrated into the construction process.
If we want to maintain momentum on climate goals, we must be strategic in how and when building performance is integrated into the construction process.
This question is of special significance with the emergence of new COVID-19 mutations and variants that can be more easily transmissible or deadly. Whether you’re a bank CEO or the property manager of an office park, this has immediate implications for you.
Office building owners better brace themselves for possible multimillion-dollar facility upgrades if they’re going to successfully lure back health-conscious tenants after the pandemic crisis finally eases.
With the time left to make a deal ticking away and other matters jockeying for attention, climate policy advocates are mounting an effort – one group declared it “an all-out offensive” – to keep pressure on the group of lawmakers negotiating a climate bill to produce a final product soon.
Once restrictions are lifted and traditional business resumes, the workplace will likely be different. Now is a time to examine commercial real estate needs and plan for the next chapter.
As Massachusetts office buildings reopened at limited capacity this week, Boston Properties partnered with a high-profile public health expert on strategies to minimize COVID-19 transmission in the workplace.