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March 8, 2022

How Two Years Of Pandemic Changed Everything For Women In CRE

New England Cold Storage President Chris Bailey talks sector trends influencing their new Sturbridge facility March 16

It hit the commercial real estate industry like a precision bomb. Two years later, fallout from the coronavirus pandemic is still being felt — especially by women.

”There's a mentality of ‘Yes, yes, yes. We understand that you are carrying a heavy burden, but this still has to get done,'" Jenna Kirkpatrick Howard, a senior vice president at Lockton Cos., told Bisnow.

This year’s International Women’s Day, which honors the economic, political and social achievements of women around the globe, neatly coincides with the onset of the pandemic on March 11, 2020. The pandemic has been an across-the-board shock to the system — a stress test of every institution, family unit and individual. But women have borne the brunt of it.

Nearly overnight, working mothers were suddenly pulling double- and even triple-duty as professionals, caregivers and educators. And women, mothers or not, were far more vulnerable to pandemic-related mass layoffs, furloughs and slashed schedules, especially as they collectively hold lesser seniority than their male counterparts and because the industries hit hardest, such as leisure and hospitality, are female-heavy ones.

In what was popularized as a “shecession,” about 12.2 million women lost their jobs in the first two months of the crisis alone, outpacing lost male jobs by more than 1 million. These are losses women have yet to recover from. Men have since regained employment at triple the rate of women, according to January 2022 U.S. Department of Labor Data, leading many to lament a lost generation of wage increases, promotions, training and the ability to amass retirement savings.

For the commercial real estate industry, long dominated by men, those losses have had a profound but varied impact. The pandemic stalled some women’s career growth and limited mentorship opportunities, prompting them to rethink their priorities, and even their industry. 

In this original series, Bisnow compiled data and experiences from dozens of individuals in the commercial real estate industry to explore the pandemic’s impact on women. 

Whether they left the industry, leveled up their career, found even footing in a remote work environment or felt a significant burden from being a working mother, every woman's experience has been different. Yet there is one common thread: The past two years have spurred massive change, reflection and growing recognition that the way we previously worked has not been friendly to the needs of women.

Read the full story here.

 
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Federal Government Looks To Sell 50-Acre Site In Boston Suburbs

Federal Government Looks To Sell 50-Acre Site In Boston Suburbs  

The federal government's real estate arm is seeking buyers for 51 acres in South Weymouth, part of the 1,400-acre site of a former naval air base.  The General Services Administration last week began an online auction for the site, despite the local agency overseeing the larger…

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Limitless Potential: Where Does Boston Life Sciences Go From Here? Find Out At Bisnow’s Boston Life Sciences Event on March 31

PRESENTED BY:   Bisnow
 
Limitless Potential: Where Does Boston Life Sciences Go From Here? Find Out At Bisnow’s Boston Life Sciences Event on March 31  

Boston consistently ranks as one of — if not the — top life sciences clusters in the country. JLL cites the area’s talent, innovation growth and life sciences job opportunities as the top reasons why.  Boston biotech companies receive massive amounts of VC funding and the nearby Massachusetts…

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In The Age Of Decarbonisation, Should You Still Build A New Skyscraper?

 

LONDON — They define London’s post-millennium skyline. From the iconic 180m-tall Gherkin to the 310m-tall Shard, skyscrapers have formed part of the bedrock of the British capital’s modern urban economic model and sense of self. 

However, with a post-pandemic upheaval in office culture, a greater awareness of environmental factors and a high-profile scheme kicked out by the government late last year, is London’s love affair with the skyscraper set to change?

Read the full story here.

 
 
       
 
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