Property investors could have just two years to get used to the idea of using cloud-based sharing applications and robotics, with the rate of technological change expected to speed up "significantly" in that time.
Hawke's Bay commercial and industrial property owners have also been urged to consider how changing business models could impact their own businesses, as more disruptive changes occur, upsetting the traditional way of doing business.
Frank Spencer, director of Logan Stone, a Hawke's Bay-based property specialist and valuation firm, said one reason for that was down to the demand for office space, which was diminishing on a "per area per employee" basis.
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"The other aspect of technology, is businesses are no longer certain about their medium and long-term future so they want more flexibility. From a property point of view, tenants are likely to want to own fit-out and change a building around internally so investors are more likely to invest in just a shelter and the bare-bones structure of a building."