
Stores remain dominant, even as digital, AI shopping grows
Friday, July 18, 2025
This is a summary
"Boards governing hundreds of thousands of aging buildings have to pay for structural evaluations to comply with the 2022 condo safety law passed in the wake of the Surfside condo tower collapse that killed 98 people. Faced with the possibility of costly repairs, boards are pushing for the cheapest possible inspection, but many engineers — who would be liable in the event of a failure — are hesitant to perform the task at all.
Buildings 30 years or older make up the majority of South Florida's condo inventory. “If you're an engineer and your license is important to you, you may not want to put your license on the line to do this type of work,” said Zana Raybon, executive director of the Florida Board of Professional Engineers."
Read the original on Bisnow
Florida Engineers Shy Away From Condo Work Amid Litigation, Liability Fears | Bisnow
Image credit to Khrystyna Liasota on Unsplash
Physical stores still dominate retail, with 77% of purchases made in-person in 2025—even as AI and e-commerce continue to grow. According to EY research, most consumers still prefer to shop for fresh food, snacks, and beverages offline, and 94% make final purchase decisions in-store after browsing online.
EY’s Jon Copestake warns retailers not to underestimate the value of brick-and-mortar. While AI tools assist shoppers, few trust them to complete purchases. Instead, stores are crucial for discovery, promotions, and building loyalty.
Forward-thinking retailers are reimagining their physical spaces with services like rentals, repairs, and immersive experiences. As Copestake says, “If you're cutting stores, you may be missing a significant trick.”
In Doral, once-busy streets and shops are suddenly quiet as fear spreads among immigrant communities following the rollback of legal protections like TPS and the CHNV parole program. The Biden-era policy had allowed over 500,000 immigrants from countries like Venezuela and Haiti to live and work legally in the U.S., but recent reversals by the Trump administration have left many without work authorization—and too afraid to leave home.
The impact is already being felt in South Florida’s construction and development sectors, where immigrants make up more than 25% of the workforce. With workplace raids increasing and employers required to use E-Verify under Florida’s SB 1718, developers may face labor shortages, project delays, and rising costs. Industry leaders warn that this could be just the beginning.
Mall traffic dipped slightly in June 2025, ending a two-month streak of growth, as shoppers pulled back following a spring surge possibly fueled by anticipated tariff hikes. Indoor malls showed the most resilience, with visits down just 0.7% year-over-year, while outlet malls saw the steepest decline at 4.4%.
Despite the June slowdown, the first half of 2025 painted a largely positive picture: indoor mall visits rose 1.8%, open-air centers grew 0.6%, and average visit duration increased across all formats—indicating stronger consumer engagement. Notably, indoor malls edged past pre-pandemic levels for the first time, up 0.3% from 2019.
The recovery continues, with open-air centers maintaining the most consistent post-COVID performance, and indoor malls closing the gap. As Placer.ai notes, the mall rebound story is still unfolding.