For years, real estate has been defined by hard numbers: location, price, yield. But today, there’s a quieter, more powerful factor shaping decisions: how spaces make people feel.
As conversations around work and mental health become more honest, the built environment is no longer just a backdrop. It’s part of the entire mental experience.
When Space Starts to Matter
There’s a kind of fatigue that doesn’t come from work alone, it comes from the spaces we occupy. Poor lighting, rigid layouts, lack of privacy or fresh air. These things add up.
The pandemic forced a global experiment in remote work, and what followed was a major shift in awareness. People noticed the difference between spaces that supported them and those that drained them. A cramped corner turned into an office revealed its limitations. A well-lit living space suddenly felt like a luxury. Access to fresh air, greenery, and quiet stopped being “nice-to-have” features and became essential.
Homes Have Evolved
The modern home is no longer just for living. It’s now an office, a meeting room, a place to rest, and sometimes all of that at once.
But many homes weren’t designed for this. That’s why today’s buyers are asking different questions:
- Can this space adapt over time?
- Does it allow for both focus and rest?
- Does it support how I live?
These questions support a widespread belief that there is a deeper need for balance.
The Office Is Changing, Not Disappearing
The idea that the office is “dead” misses the point. What’s happening is a reset.
Workspaces are being reimagined not just as places to work, but as places to collaborate, connect, and create. The sterile, high-density layouts of the past are giving way to environments that prioritise natural light, acoustic comfort, and spatial variety.
This shift is not just about aesthetics. It is about acknowledging that productivity and mental health are linked. A well-designed office can reduce stress, improve focus, and foster a sense of belonging. A poorly designed one does the opposite
Generational Expectations Are Changing the Brief
The younger generation, especially Gen Z, are bringing a different set of expectations into the real estate market, both as tenants and as employees. They are less willing to accept environments that feel transactional or indifferent to their wellbeing.
For them, value is not defined by square footage alone. It includes experience, and alignment with lifestyle. They are more likely to choose a slightly smaller space that feels right over a larger one that doesn’t.
A More Honest Conversation
If there’s one thing the current conversation around work and mental health is teaching us, it’s this: people are tired of pretending everything is fine when it isn’t.
Real estate has a role to play in this honesty. It can either reinforce environments that people endure, or it can help create environments where people thrive.
The difference is not always dramatic. Sometimes, it is as simple as a window that lets in more light, a layout that offers more breathing room, or a shared space that encourages connection without forcing it.
Buildings are not just assets. They are experiences. As the lines between work, life, and wellbeing continue to blur, the question for the real estate industry is no longer just “What are we building?” but “How are people living within what we build?”
In the end, the true value of space is not measured only in return, but in how it supports the people inside it.
Nonso Okafor
Afriland Properties Plc


