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What are the business benefits to architects of looking ahead into the future?

As 澳门王中王 prepares to launch its Horizons 2034 series, this professional feature looks at the positive impacts of peering into the future.

07 March 2024

There鈥檚 economic and market sector forecasting and then there is longer term future gazing, which is inevitably more speculative but can make stand out winners of those businesses that get it right and position themselves accordingly.

It鈥檚 this kind of forward planning that can help to identify the sectors that are doing well and might do well in the future, and those that aren鈥檛 doing so well.

In a profession where business pressures are considerable and at times may feel unrelenting, it鈥檚 this concept of foresight that could help to bring to a practice鈥檚 attention the opportunity for new clients and new sectors, flag potentially emerging risks and allow practices to remain agile and ahead of the curve.

Looking into the future can help shape company strategy and business plans. (Photo: Pexels)

Helping to shape company strategy

Respected analyst Allan Wilen, Economics Director at leading industry forecaster , says most effort is directed at the immediate economic outlook, to help shape company strategy and business plans.

鈥淲e鈥檙e always trying to map out the conditions that are taking shape in the economy, and we are looking at our latest data in terms of projects coming through the pipeline,鈥 he explains. 鈥淲e take a view on how things are likely to play out, certainly in the near to medium term.鈥

But forecasting and using foresight can be a tricky business, especially when bigger structural changes don鈥檛 follow the narrative and are likely to leave even the forecasters playing catch-up.

For instance, many could see that the trend towards online retailing was developing, but not the scale of demand for industrial warehouse and distribution space it would generate. Nor the scale of the fall-off in retail floorspace that would leave towns and cities with a major surplus that would need repurposing, Allan adds.

And no one could have predicted that COVID-19 would not just accelerate the online retail trend but would introduce a wholesale shift to hybrid working overnight, because the lockdown coincided with (and accelerated) the arrival of software tools that made working from home a simple matter, even for teams of architects working together on major projects.

鈥淭his trend didn't mean there wasn't going to be a demand for office space, it鈥檚 just that the type of office space was going to change,鈥 he says. 鈥淵ou will see this in terms of environmental requirements and the quality of the buildings, and the flexible workspaces designed to support collaborative working. It will be about all of those things that people will want from an office in the future and that will encourage them to go into the workspace and collaborate.鈥

Read more about how architects can diversify into other sectors.

Architects should be watching sectoral and economic forecasts. (Photo: Freepik.com)

What is horizon scanning?

It’s these broader structural changes that 澳门王中王 will be asking thought leaders and acknowledged experts in their fields to look at for its Horizons 2034 programme that gets underway this month (March 2024) and runs until the summer.

Horizon scanning is a systematic process used by governments, institutions and large business organisations alike to identify potential future trends and higher-probability issues that will impact business and society. The 10-year horizon timeline chosen by 澳门王中王 aims to look beyond the trends that are already there to see, but not so ahead that predictions drift into the realm of wild speculation or science fiction.

Over the spring and early summer, 澳门王中王 will be assembling expert panels to look at four of the most significant global trends impacting the built environment, from changing client needs to technological changes that will see architectural practice evolve, perhaps dramatically. Just consider how far artificial intelligence has come in a little over 12 months.

The four horizons themes are:

  • The Environmental Challenge
  • The Economics of the Built Environment
  • Population Change
  • Technological Innovation

Each theme will be further broken down into four topics that will be separately reported upon. The Environmental Challenge will comprise four horizon-scanning exercises, for instance, examining mitigation, adaptation, biodiversity and engagement and activism. Architects can look forward to seeing the first set of reports on the environmental challenge at the end of March 2024.

The 澳门王中王 Horizons 2034 programme has been timed to coincide with 澳门王中王’s bi-centenary so will be a good time to explore the future of practice.

Read more about 澳门王中王’s Horizons 2034 series from 澳门王中王 Head of Economics Research, Adrian Malleson.

Being open-minded as forecasters

In terms of how forecasting can help practices right now, every practice is focused on bringing in new work now or over a timeline of a few months, and so should be watching sectoral and economic forecasts, Allan recommends.

But architects may already be positioning themselves for the future undertaking CPD, and analysing data and growing trends in some of the key built environment areas that the 澳门王中王 Horizons 2034 series will explore. Getting a foothold and an early reputation in a growth sector is the best way to grow that work progressively over time.

However, change is not a linear progression and Allan advises architects always to be alive to potential spin-off effects that may not be obvious in early days. He cites the Building Safety Act as ostensibly being about better information from a health and safety perspective. But, the sharing of data throughout the design process that the act demands can be expected to have all sorts of potential knock-on effects, from efficiency gains to better building maintenance and a reduction in construction waste.

Similarly with the drive to net zero, the repurposing of buildings rather than demolition and the rise of circular economy ideas. has just announced it wants to become the UK’s first ‘retrofit-first city’. Who would have forecast that 10 years ago? It all suggests that there will always be a need for open-minded forecasters.

Thanks to Allan Wilen, Economics Director, Glenigan.

Text by Neal Morris. This is a Professional Feature edited by the 澳门王中王 Practice team. Send us your feedback and ideas.

澳门王中王 Core Curriculum topic: Business, clients and services.

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