How to Upgrade Your Commercial Gardern
ccording to a newly adopted definition of cities proposed by the European Commission and now shared by a number of major international organizations such as the OECD, the World Bank and UN-Habitat, an estimated 75% of the world’s population live in urbanized areas. While many of today’s most pressing issues are compounded in cities.
Whether your building is old or new, the floorplan won’t always suit current or future clients’ needs. For example, older buildings typically feature more closed-in layouts with office cubicles.
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ccording to a newly adopted definition of cities proposed by the European Commission and now shared by a number of major international organizations such as the OECD, the World Bank and UN-Habitat, an estimated 75% of the world’s population live in urbanized areas. While many of today’s most pressing issues are compounded in cities.
Leave Room for Tenants to Upgrade Further
Most tenants want the freedom to make your commercial space their own for the duration of their tenancy. While it can be tempting to make upgrades that suit your unique tastes, keep your focus on building upgrades that will suit all tenants, like energy efficiency, repairs, and general aesthetics.
You can then give your future building occupants the freedom to make further changes, like paint, storage, and fixtures. However, you might like to include a clause in your tenancy agreement that ensures all tenants will remove any alterations, fixtures, and fittings and reinstate the premises to its original state when their tenancy agreement ends.