The new realism: Redefining mixed-use across the Asia-Pacific

The predictable logic of the successful mixed-use city block – offices on top, shops on the ground – is no longer. A new realism is redefining how the Asia-Pacific builds for an uncertain future. Download the report.

For decades, the blueprint for a successful mixed-use precinct followed a predictable logic: a gleaming office tower positioned atop a bustling podium of shops and restaurants. It was a big bang’ approach to urbanism — a high-stakes bet that if you built a grand, fixed future, the city would eventually grow to meet it.

That logic is now fracturing. In major markets from Sydney to Shanghai, a volatile cocktail of high interest rates, post-pandemic shifts, and the rapid onset of AI-driven corporate downsizing has upended the old reliance on a stable urban future.

THE GREAT MISMATCH

Our latest research reveals a fundamental mismatch between the ambitious city-scale dreams of governments and the cautious, current realities of developers. The era of the default mix’ has ended, replaced by what we call the new realism. The most resilient projects today no longer rely on a singular, static vision. Instead, the future belongs to diverse, high-performing systems designed to absorb risk and attract capital from day one.

In a city that’s reached its natural boundaries, the only direction is up. Mixed-use stops being a nice-to-have’ and becomes the only way to make a site worth building on.”

— Policy / advocacy specialist, Australia 

THREE PATHS THROUGH UNCERTAINTY 

Our white paper identifies three distinct paths for navigating this uncertainty:

  • The neighbourhood ecosystem: Shifting focus toward analogue essentials — services like healthcare, childcare, and vocational learning — that require a physical presence. These anchors create a reliable pulse of activity immune to digital disruption and the rise of AI.
  • The civic-commercial hybrid: Stabilising projects through public anchors and a shared, long-term responsibility between the private sector and government.
  • The ready-made pivot: Treating flexibility as spatial insurance. By integrating high-spec infrastructure and generous floor heights into the initial brief, developers buy the option to evolve rather than facing the prohibitive costs of a future retrofit.

Success in this new era is not about acting on every approach at once, but about selecting the specific logic that aligns with a project’s unique risk profile.

For a copy of the full report, The New Realism, register below to access now.

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