Keys to Thriving Centres in a Post-Pandemic World, Construction industry Coronavirus recovery, COVID-19 buildings guide

Keys to Thriving Centres in a Post-Pandemic World Guide

30 Apr 2021

Rebecca Spencer & Harold Perks

Opportunities for people to connect have been limited since work, school, holidays, and all other usual activities ground to a halt over the past year.  Little did we realise that walking down the street, exercising, shopping, or going out to eat (even if alone) involved so many chance interactions with others that benefited our mental health and overall well-being.

For many of us, a severely limited roster of activities has also involved masking up, restricting our usual smiles and chats with friends, neighbours, and acquaintances.

3 keys to thriving centres in a post-pandemic world

Three Keys to Thriving Centres in a Post-Pandemic World

In this new world we are facing, the value and opportunity retail and town centre developments contribute to a wide cross-section of our community to interact, many times a week (and even daily, such as at a regular coffee spot) becomes abundantly clear.

Hames Sharley’s design process for centres and precincts focuses on responding firstly to local and the broader context, socially and physically. We then layer the considerations of maximising the built form potential with what the customer base needs and wants, together with owner/operator aspirations. This approach involves inputs, iterations and design reviews with professionals across our research and analysis, planning, interior design and architecture portfolios. We work nationally to address challenges and devise solutions for our clients. For example, Director Harold Perks in Hames Sharley’s Melbourne studio, collaborates with Strategic Research Planner Rebecca Spencer in Perth within the practice’s Retail and Town Centres Portfolio.

With Hames Sharley’s multi-decade retail design pedigree on a broad spectrum of centres – new and redeveloping – from local to super-regional, it would be easy to lose sight of what creates successful outcomes. But for the team, it begins simply by being passionate and personable.

“Our special ingredient is we love doing what we do and have fun crafting remarkable spaces and places with our in-depth understanding of each community’s nuances and needs,” says Rebecca.

“This enthusiasm and collaboration shines through and is blended with a respect and seriousness about the risks borne by our clients in developing retail-based or mixed-use developments,” Harold reiterates.

Keeping it local

An empty calendar, not a single commitment or activity on the horizon, nothing to juggle and squash into an already busy week – this is a COVID lockdown induced feeling that we have all experienced in the past year.  And for many of us, led to a re-organisation and evaluation of our post-pandemic lives. Both social and work patterns altered greatly, with recently released ABS statistics highlighting the large and sustained swing towards working from home. In February 2021, two fifths (41%) of people were working from home at least once a week, while in contrast less than a quarter of us (24%) were doing so, pre-COVID.

This means increased localism with patronage of centres and facilities closer to home now more intensive and frequent, contrasting to our previous dependence on Central business district shopping or regional centres, visited in lunch breaks or on our commute. This shift in the importance and greater utilisation of neighbourhood centres may be tempered by a tendency to return to our habit of rushing around from place to place, over-booking ourselves and leaving little time to enjoy local places with the people we know and love.

However, Hames Sharley contends that a thoughtfully designed, locally responsive centre that delights in providing a convenient (often walkable) shopping, services and food & beverage experience, has become the jewel in a neighbourhood’s crown.

Keys to thriving centres in a post-pandemic world

Understanding the drivers of our communities  

So, we ask ourselves, why this is? A visit to such a place is simple, enjoyable, and, importantly, repeatable. Hames Sharley’s process of highlighting and showcasing the competitive advantages of each site we reimagine or create begins with a thorough investigation. The Urban Development and Retail portfolios undertake in-depth investigations and analysis to fundamentally understand client objectives, drivers and performance indicators.

This foundation permits full understanding and, when appropriate, the ability to challenge assumptions or responses to retail trends. For instance, in its December 2020 report on the impacts of COVID, Infrastructure Australia noted that online-only retailers share price performance last year saw growth in the 300-450% range. In contrast, results for bricks and mortar operators contracted.  Further, Australia’s prior downward household waste trends were bucked by a 20% spike during the pandemic. However, we believe that post-vaccination, the human longing for connection through time outside the confines of home, plus a desire to minimise packaging waste from home-delivered takeaways/shopping will diminish this home delivery dominance – with nimble, tailored centres retaining their appeal.

Delivering a ‘third place’ – Mezz Shopping Cnetre

Thirdly, in denser urban environments and a society where more people are living alone, in smaller family units or where home has also morphed into their workplace, centres are increasingly performing a ‘third place’ role. This means a pivot in thinking, challenging a purely transactional role of centres, encouraging a welcoming public realm alongside commercialised spaces. Hames Sharley’s recent work of the Mezz Shopping Cnetre in Mount Hawthorn, is a prime example of a redevelopment outcome that delivers a third place, that is exceptional by being true to local lifestyles and needs, and to local character.

“The reimagining of a car park/laneway to the rear of The Mezz extended the retail environment, opened up internalised spaces, blended it with public space, better linked with the parking and the best part is it has been welcomed and extensively enjoyed by the locals,” says Harold.

“It makes the spaces between work harder, extends the length of a typical shopping visit by offering a comfortable, identifiable place to meet and relax.  Hames Sharley believes these sorts of moves towards inclusive designs that welcome all and generate community buy in, are also leading to better asset performance for clients.”

The appeal of The Mezz to its inhabitants and visitors is centred on a strong food culture, an honest use and adaption of the built fabric, a strong community focus and creative spirit.

The Mezz was programmed to cater to diverse demographics along its length. This meant kid’s play and vegetable gardens at one end (through a mixed-zone for families and parents) and a licensed seating area, serving alcohol for younger adults and couples down the other.

“The contextual appropriateness of the design has encouraged visitation back into Mt Hawthorn,” states Harold.

Accessible and locally resonant centres

Hames Sharley believes these sorts of moves towards inclusive designs that welcome all and generate community buy-in also lead to better asset performance outcomes for clients.

Easily accessible and locally resonant centres that promoted multiple visits per week shone through over the last 12 months. This expedient approach is nothing new, though it is becoming a more evident pillar of robustness for retail-based assets moving forward. Convenience, public places, and meaningful human connection opportunities represent three of the most important keys to a thriving, successful centre, that reflects the uniqueness of its customers and supports its community.

Hames Sharley takes pride in revitalising and extending centres to meet and exceed client’s expectations – the passion and commitment we demonstrate and fun we have along the way are bonuses.

Keys to thriving centres in a post-pandemic world images / information received 300421

Previously on e-architect:

COVID-19 Crisis Impact on Buildings

UK Construction Industry recovery news

UK Construction Industry recovery news

Rethinking design: Going viral – how the coronavirus will affect urban design

How COVID-19 changes urban design

How COVID-19 changes urban design

COVID19 Impact on Hotels & Resorts Guest Journey

COVID19 Impact on guest journey

How COVID-19 is changing the way we work

How COVID-19 changes the way we work

How COVID-19 changes the way we work

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Database for Quarantined Architects

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The impact of coronavirus on the property market

Coronavirus on the property market

Global equity markets have been hit hard by the coronavirus, which has been the catalyst for the biggest market sell off since the 2008 crash.

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Coronavirus (COVID-19): UK government response.

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