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Angelica Bush, Madrid, Monday 16th March 2026
The Architecture of Insight: A Masterclass in the Corporate Built Environment
In the grand, sweeping narrative of global commerce, we have long obsessed over the movement of capital and the flux of labour. Yet, we have been curiously blind to the very stage upon which this drama unfolds: the corporate estate. In his magisterial new work, Building Insight: Data, Information and Advanced Analytics in Corporate Real Estate, Martyn Jones, a “whisperer of unruly data” with a pedigree that reads like a Cold War thriller, seeks to rectify this oversight.
Jones does not merely write about buildings; he writes about the architecture of information. For too long, Corporate Real Estate Management (CREM) has been the “insular, withdrawn, and conservative” sibling of the C-suite, left to its own devices in a fog of unaligned metadata and legacy spreadsheets. Jones shatters this complacency, arguing that in an era of hybrid work and radical transparency, the corporate estate must transition from a passive cost centre to a high-octane engine of strategic value.
The Triple Helix of Modern CREM
The brilliance of Building Insight lies in its refusal to treat real estate as a mere matter of bricks and mortar. Jones posits a “Triple Helix” of mastery required for the modern practitioner:
- The Analytical Rigour: Jones demands a shift toward “genuine insight” through advanced analytics. This is not data for data’s sake, which he memorably dismisses as “noise with a suit on”, but a structural life-support system for decision-making. From IoT-driven occupancy sensors to BIM (Building Information Modelling), the goal is a “logic layer” that reconciles the physical and digital.
- The Anthropological Lens: In a move that would delight the likes of Gillian Tett, Jones insists that CREM is fundamentally about anthropology, sociology, and psychology. To manage a workspace is to manage the “learnt behavior” of its inhabitants. He warns that ignoring the human “natives” in favour of a purely logical view of business is a “perilous” path that only breeds resistance.
- The Ethical Imperative: Aligning with the grand sweeps of Paul Kennedy’s historical foresight, Jones anchors the future of the built environment in Agenda 2030. The intersection of CREM with Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) is not an elective; it is the new baseline for institutional resilience.
A Blueprint for the Future
Jones provides a comprehensive taxonomy of the “eighteen variations” of real estate management, but his focus remains resolutely on the Integrated Workplace Management System (IWMS) and the “Grand Central of Everything”, the data governance frameworks that prevent our invisible digital buildings from collapsing.
The book’s appendices are a masterclass in themselves, offering a “basket full of cases” and innovative performance measures that move beyond the crude metrics of the past. He challenges the “miracle that curiosity survives formal education” by urging a constant, restless questioning of the status quo.
Verdict
Martyn Jones has written a book that is, like the author himself, “a leek in a paella”, something that adds a necessary, sharp flavour to a complex dish. Building Insight is more than a manual; it is a manifesto for the “whisperers” who must now lead. For any leader who suspects that their most expensive asset, their physical footprint, is being managed by “carpet-baggers” rather than strategists, this is the essential map for the journey ahead.
It is a work of authority, innovation, and, above all, profound clarity. In the “still, small voice” of the schema, Jones has found the firm’s future.
THE END
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