If I had told you this time last year that we’d be in the midst of a global pandemic, with our borders closed, footballers playing in front of empty stadiums, the Olympics postponed and Melbourne in lockdown, there’s not a chance you would have believed me.
Yet, here we are.
The world is a crazy place and COVID-19 has changed it immeasurably, and possibly forever.
Like most huge societal and political shifts, these changes will inevitably be reflected in our property markets.
Priorities are likely to change, with some buyers willing to pay a little more for properties with “pandemic appeal”.
What do I mean by that?
Well, I think it’s fair to say that this pandemic has exposed some existing issues in both employment and housing that were easy to ignore in the past.
You only have to look at the shocking situation in aged care facilities around the country to see that many accommodation providers simply aren’t set up to cope with plague-like conditions – and the same goes for some dwelling types.
Remember the hard lockdowns of the public housing towers in Melbourne in early July?
Acting Australian Chief Medical Officer Paul Kelly labelled them “vertical cruise ships”, and it’s easy to see why.
With busy lifts, shared hallways and communal facilities like laundries and garbage disposals, high-rise living is the ideal breeding ground for the virus, as we’ve seen both in Australia and overseas.
So, it stands to reason that the buyers of 2021 and beyond might not be so keen to live in an apartment and be breathing the same air and touching the same lift buttons as hundreds of other people.
Instead, they may prefer to purchase standalone dwellings that they can barricade and sanitise to their heart’s content in the event of another wave of the virus.
Those high-rise towers built in our cities over the last decade were designed to cram as many people as possible in one place.
Health and hygiene were not a consideration.
However, now we look at things differently and are keen to minimise contact with everything that goes with living in multi-storey buildings: stair rails, elevator buttons, door handles and even neighbours.
After forced self-isolation on different floors above the ground, often without a balcony or terrace, we will all desperately want to have a house, townhouse or villa unit
It can be small, but with a courtyard and a terrace where you can have coffee in the morning.
While apartments in high rise towers will be out of favour, those more spacious solidly built established apartments that we used to call flats, with their own balconies and no communal facilities located in our inner and middle ring suburbs will still suit many tenants and first home buyers.
We'll also be saying goodbye to one of the main trends of recent years: open-plan spaces, with the entrance, living room, dining space and kitchen united as occurs in many of those newly built apartment towers.
We’ll want to be able to separate work and living spaces.
Similarly, widespread closures during the lockdown have also brought home how much we rely on our public parks, gyms and kid’s activities to keep us all happy and healthy.
I can only imagine what a nightmare the stay-at-home orders must have been for parents with small children living in apartments without a garden, or for gym junkies forced to substitute cans of baked beans for their usual weights in their at-home workouts.
As such, room for a home gym setup, space for the kids to do their karate or dance classes online and a reasonable outdoor area for the family to get some fresh air and vitamin D are likely going to shift from the “nice to have” category into the “non-negotiables” list for owner occupiers.
Tenants, too, will have similar wish-lists, and savvy property investors will strive to cater to this.
The way we work and live
During quarantine, most of us were forced to work from home.
Of course there was a group of people who, on the first day after the quarantine, raced to meet colleagues and drink that office coffee.
But there are also those who of us who were not so keen to return to the office.
More attention will be given to the arrangement of the workplace at home.
Adequate home office facilities will be right at the top of many buyers’ property wish lists.
Anyone who has been forced to squeeze their laptop next to the kids’ schoolwork on the kitchen table or host a Zoom meeting in the spare room with the family washing hanging in the background will appreciate the need for a dedicated workspace in their next home.
Whether it’s for one or two kids to learn remotely or for mum and dad to work without leaving the house, a desk in the corner of the lounge room simply isn’t going to cut it in the post-pandemic property market.
Spatial organisation will change, with the place to work at home no longer a desk with a parody of an office chair and a lamp, slotted somewhere in the corner of the living room or under the stairs.
Now it will be a completely separate room
Buyers will instead be seeking a fully equipped, sound-insulated separate home office with large windows, blackout curtains and all the required tech such as plenty of power points a strong NBN connection and an area for a Zoom green screen.
For sellers, this means styling the spare room or office zone appropriately, so people can really envision filing their reports or tallying up their accounts in the space.
Add some comfortable, ergonomic furniture and highlight the window for natural light, and you’ve created the ideal home office where potential buyers can run their empire while wearing their comfiest trackpants.
Other things buyers could be looking for post-pandemic might include a spare room to house a relative in the event of another lockdown, to avoid splitting up the family.
It’s not just the property itself that will need to meet these newly evolved needs – location will play a big part too.
Buyers will want to know they’re within the zone to have groceries and other supplies easily and cheaply delivered, and adequate storage for stockpiling (not panic buying!) could also be on their wish lists.
As everything around us evolves and adapts to this new normal, homeowners and investors must do the same, and view properties with a post-pandemic eye.
Looking at the bigger picture is key has always been key to your success as a property investor.
But more than ever, whether you’re hunting for a new place to live, looking to add to your portfolio of rentals, or sprucing up a property ready for sale, it’s absolutely crucial.
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Michael Yardney is CEO of Metropole Property Strategists, which creates wealth for its clients through independent, unbiased property advice and advocacy. He is a best-selling author, one of Australia’s leading experts in wealth creation through property and writes the Property Update blog.
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