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El. knyga: Real Estate and the New Economy: The Impact of Information and Communications Technology

(Consultant, RETRI), (iX Consluting Ltd), (University of Reading), (Oxford Brookes University), (ATIS REAL Weatheralls)
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Serija: Real Estate Issues
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Apr-2008
  • Leidėjas: Wiley-Blackwell
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781405143691
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Serija: Real Estate Issues
  • Išleidimo metai: 15-Apr-2008
  • Leidėjas: Wiley-Blackwell
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781405143691
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Private sector commercial property represents some £400 bn, or 34% of total UK business assets and is a vital fabric for housing commercial enterprise. Yet social and economic forces for change, linked with new technology, are making owners and occupiers question the very nature and purpose of property and real estate. Printing, steam power; canals and railroads; mass media and, more recently, information and communications technology (ICT) have brought about major changes in both organisational and economic structures over the centuries. On the one hand, there has been much hype about the role that ICT would play in eliminating the need for physical real estate space; and on the other, some have suggested that institutional factors and fixed costs mitigate against transformative change in real estate.

Building on the authors' own research and a growing body of new, international findings in the field, the book provides a balanced view between these two positions. It will demonstrate how ICT affects the shape and form of real estate in our towns and cities, with other forces in the new economy.

The book:





examines how ICT and organisational change, combined with social, political and economic factors, affects real estate space demand analyses how real estate strategies are changing to reflect these trends shows how technology affects the geography and space of real estate and infrastructure in our towns and cities investigates future urban shape and form.

Recenzijos

'The strength of this books lies in its very broad attitude to the subject plus solid and innovative conceptual framework. The book has a clear structure and is well organised. Because of its holistic and very detailed character the book can be recommended as a supplementary handbook for students of economics, geography or planning.' European Spatial Research and Policy. 2,2,2005. The authors of this book are to be applauded. They have sought, through their socio-technical approach, to look at the complex interactions between technology, society and economics. as someone who earns his living by advising one of the UKs largest property investors on which properties to own and where, this book is very timely...In writing this comprehensive and very fully referenced text, the authors have done us all a great service.



Paul McNamara, Prudential Property Investment Managers



'It is recommended for both real estate professionals who are interested in the increasing relevance of ICT to the real estate industry, as well as ICT experts seeking to understand how and to what extents the real estate industry will grasp the rapidily changing field of ICT.' Urban Studies

The Authors xi
Foreword xiii
Paul McNamara
Preface xv
Table of Responsibilities
xviii
Introduction
1(40)
Background
1(1)
Aim and objectives
2(1)
Definitions
3(2)
Technological change: alternative perspectives
5(27)
Summary -- an overview
32(1)
An integrative socio-technical framework for ICT and real estate
33(2)
Examples of the socio-technical approach
35(2)
Key themes and layout of the book
37(1)
Notes
38(3)
Part 1 Context and Framework
41(156)
The Social, Economic and Political Context of ICT Transformation
43(41)
Introduction
43(1)
Understanding the role of technological change in society
44(6)
Towards an information society and the new economy?
50(6)
The role of knowledge and innovation in policy
56(2)
Information society policy development in the UK
58(8)
Measuring the information society
66(3)
Implications of the development of an information society
69(11)
Summary
80(1)
Notes
81(3)
Technological Change: Diffusion and Adoption of ICT by Consumers, Businesses and Government
84(44)
Introduction
84(1)
Technology diffusion
84(3)
Implications of ICT diffusion for consumers, businesses and government
87(20)
Internet-driven business activities: eBusiness, eCommerce and eWork
107(14)
Some implications of ICT adoption for real estate
121(4)
Summary
125(1)
Notes
125(3)
Business Process and Organisational Change
128(32)
Introduction
128(1)
Understanding corporate change
128(3)
ICT and the design of organisations
131(4)
Generic business processes
135(4)
Procurement
139(3)
Operational management
142(1)
Marketing
143(2)
Customer relationship management
145(1)
Accounting
146(1)
Recruitment
146(1)
Stock management
146(1)
Financial management
147(1)
Mapping processes to property
148(10)
Summary
158(1)
Notes
158(2)
The New Economy and Real Estate
160(37)
Introduction
160(1)
What is the new economy?
161(4)
The evidence for a new economy
165(13)
The role of real estate in the new economy
178(16)
Summary
194(1)
Notes
195(2)
Part 2 Real Estate Spaces and the Impact of ICT
197(132)
Real Estate Spaces
199(27)
Introduction
199(2)
The paradox of location in the new economy
201(3)
Physical form and virtual reality
204(2)
Transactions in space
206(3)
Personal space
209(4)
Private space
213(11)
Summary
224(1)
Notes
225(1)
Real Estate Use and ICT
226(53)
Introduction
226(1)
Sales
226(9)
Processing
235(15)
Manufacturing
250(7)
Distribution
257(8)
Leisure and living
265(10)
Summary
275(1)
Notes
275(4)
Real Estate Service Providers and ICT
279(50)
Introduction
279(2)
The changing context of real estate investment
281(7)
The owner's manager
288(13)
The occupier's manager
301(12)
Appraisers
313(5)
Brokers
318(9)
Summary
327(1)
Notes
327(2)
Part 3 The Future
329(43)
New Directions and Policy Implications: The Future of Real Estate in the New Economy
331(41)
Introduction
331(1)
The socio-technical framework
332(10)
New types of real estate
342(7)
Implications of ICT transformation for existing real estate
349(2)
Policy issues
351(7)
Future visions
358(8)
Is there still a future for real estate in the new economy?
366(2)
Notes
368(4)
References 372(40)
Index 412


Tim Dixon is Director of the Oxford Institute of Sustainable Development and Professor of Real Estate in the Department of Real Estate and Construction at Oxford Brookes University. With more than 25 years' experience of research, education and professional practice in the built environment he is a qualified fellow of the RICS and of the Higher Education Academy, a member of SEEDA's South East Excellence Advisory Board, as well as the editorial boards of five leading international real estate journals. He has worked on funded collaborative research projects with UK and overseas academics and practitioners and his personal research interests revolve around the sustainability agenda and its impact on property development, investment and occupation, and the impact of ICT on commercial property and real estate markets. The research is based on a strong interdisciplinary approach which incorporates policy and practice impacts, and futures thinking. He is also a member of the CORENET Sustainability Working Group, and a member of the Steering Group for the 'Future of Cities' Research programme, based in the James Martin 21st Century School at Oxford University. In 2009 he was awarded Honorary Fellow status of the Institute of Green Professionals.