BREAKING NEWS – top 5 stories 06/07/2021

Estate Agent Networking Breaking News

Daily bite-sized proptech and real estate news in partnership with Proptech-X. Today, Stanton looks at Boris Johnson, Ministry of Housing, 5G, and more.

 

  • 19th July: No facemasks and back to the office for agents?
  • Is the 5G revolution fact or fiction?
  • Ministry of Housing unveils building safety bill
  • The Legal Services Consumer Panel tracker survey says clients happier than ever
  • Proptech: Will it speed the return to physical offices?

 

19th July: No facemasks and back to the office for agents?

Since March last year, vast swathes of the UK real estate industry (and every other industry) have been in some form of lockdown. In less than two weeks we are going to be back to normal. Or are we?

Now, Boris has spoken…again. On the 19th we all get our “freedom.”

Putting aside the Delta variant moving through the population at an alarming rate, the property market is in rude health. All while thousands of estate agents and letting agents have been conducting their work from home.

The pandemic has forced estate agencies to go digital; Face to face out, software and video conferencing in. Some 60% of lettings agents have said they acquired new tenants via virtual viewings, without ever being present at the property.

Interesting times, indeed. With more and more SaaS rolling out, it remains to be seen if the estate on the high street will be brimming with people anytime soon, or if canny owners will be looking to cut overheads and branch numbers.

 

Is the 5G revolution fact or fiction?

It has long been heralded that 5G will superconduct the future, allowing the Internet of Things (IoT) to move at a much quicker pace, knitting our modern lives together with all of our digital requirements.

In the smart city sector, which is run on the interconnections of things that do and things that calibrate, there is now growing concern that the hype is beginning to overreach the actual reality.

5G relies upon advanced satellite technology to power the whole network. Despite literally billions of dollars now reserved for fixes for the problem of getting 5G to every inhabited area, progress is slow.

 

Ministry of Housing unveils building safety bill

Secretary of State for Housing Robert Jenrick and Lord Stephen Greenhalgh are behind The Building Safety Bill published 5th July. According to the Government website, it will “create lasting generational change and set a clear pathway for the future on how residential buildings should be built and maintained.”

The remit of the bill will be to give residents more direct power and bring faster, biting sanctions on developers who have been lapsing in their duty of care whilst planning and constructing buildings. There will be a building safety regulator who specifically looks at buildings 18metres and higher, both new builds and those already constructed but found wanting.

With the necessity of a golden thread of information to be stored, it looks like accountability is high on the agenda.

Jenrick said: “This Bill will ensure high standards of safety for people’s homes, and in particular for high rise buildings, with a new regulator providing essential oversight at every stage of a building’s lifecycle, from design, construction, completion to occupation.

“The new building safety regime will be a proportionate one, ensuring those buildings requiring remediation are brought to an acceptable standard of safety swiftly, and reassuring the vast majority of residents and leaseholders in those buildings that their homes are safe.”

Following the huge salaries and bonuses that CEOs of national homebuilders have received in recent years, is Mr Jenrick realising that, after Grenfell, not everything is as it should be?

Hundreds of thousands of people are living in properties they cannot sell, re-mortgage, or let, and many are having to pay for fire watchers and remedial work – often as high as £50,000 – with no comeback for the original builder.

Buying or renting a home of sound, lasting construction should be a given, not a building safety lottery.

If the bill becomes law, there will be a retrospective clause of 15 years, meaning developers would be in the firing line for a decade and a half.

 

The Legal Services Consumer Panel tracker survey says clients happier than ever

According to The Law Society Gazette, clients have shown an uptick in the level of service meted out to them by the legal profession during the lockdown, with an 83% mark of satisfaction up from last year. Maybe this is in spite of, or because of the fact that many consumers of legal services did so virtually or via the web, so face to physical face time was at an all-time low.

 

Proptech: Will it speed the return to physical offices?

According to a recent report, 300 commercial real estate operators were asked if their buildings would soon see full occupancy. Over 54% felt that in the next six months the capacity would be lower.

Others were more bullish, saying that modern tech was helping with controlling environments. Internal digital planning was helping for more efficient and safer work areas, and the use of touchless entrance systems and smart tech to minimise big meeting groups, utilising video conferencing etc, could hold the answer.

Andrew Stanton

CEO & Founder Proptech-PR. Proptech Real Estate Influencer, Executive Editor of Estate Agent Networking. Leading PR consultancy in Proptech & Real Estate.

You May Also Enjoy

AI in estate agency letting agency property
Estate Agent Talk

AI property search not yet mainstream

The latest research by GetAgent.co.uk has revealed that while artificial intelligence is increasingly being embraced across the property industry, the technology has yet to become a mainstream tool for buyers and sellers when it comes to searching for and marketing homes. GetAgent commissioned a survey* of UK estate agents to understand how widely AI-powered search…
Read More
Breaking News

70% of Britain’s housing market is in recovery with prices trending upwards

The latest research from Yopa reveals that 70% of the British housing market is now in recovery with prices trending upwards following the challenging conditions of the past two years. This is despite the broader national picture showing that average house prices have edged down over the last six months. Yopa analysed six months of…
Read More
Breaking News

Breaking Property News 12/3/26

Daily bite-sized proptech and property news in partnership with Proptech-X.   ‘The actual work, making smart procurement decisions, protecting the owner’s budget was buried under a mountain of emails and calls’ Rihards Trops CEO of TenderPro   Every property manager knows the feeling. You need to find a contractor, get three comparable quotes, coordinate site visits,…
Read More
Breaking News

Renters’ Rights Act already driving surge in tenant complaints

“Renters’ Rights effect” drives unprecedented demand dispute resolution Industry redress scheme flooded with enquiries ahead of Act going live in May   THE IMPENDING implementation of the Renters’ Rights Act has already led to unprecedented demand for The Property Ombudsman’s services, as more tenants seek support to resolve disputes fairly and independently. In the four…
Read More
Breaking News

Rights Act: Key changes renters need to know — new rules start on 1 May 2026

The Renters’ Rights Act is a major overhaul of the rules that govern renting in England, the biggest in decades. Propertymark, the UK’s leading body for property professionals, wants renters to understand what’s coming and how it will affect them. The next wave of changes under the Act will take effect on 1 May 2026.…
Read More
Breaking News

What Would Make Me Stay: How Tenants Are Redefining What Home Really Means

68% of tenants say the single biggest factor that would make them stay in their rental home long term is the relationship with their landlord or agent, above rent levels, location, or the quality of the property itself. That is the headline finding from LRG’s Winter 2025/26 Lettings Report, and it points to something the…
Read More