Real estate life cycle management

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Real estate life cycle management (ILM) is a term from the real estate industry and comprises the management of all core processes relating to the planning, construction, operation and marketing of real estate (real estate life cycle). The life cycle of a property begins with the planning and realization phase, is continued with the building and maintenance management and ends with the demolition / dismantling or the further use of the property.

At the University of Applied Sciences in Münster, architecture faculty , the teaching and research field of real estate life cycle management and facility management was established in 2007, initially as an endowed chair and later as a scheduled chair. Aspects of green building and sustainability flow into the work.

literature

  • Markus G. Viering, Bernd Kochendörfer , Jens H. Liebchen: Management services in the life cycle of real estate. Teubner, Wiesbaden 2007, ISBN 978-3-519-00528-5 .
  • Andrea Pelzeter, Karl-Werner Schulte , Stephan Bone-Winkel : Life cycle costs of real estate: Influence of location, design and environment (= publications on real estate economics . Volume 36). Rudolf Müller, Cologne 2006, ISBN 3-89984-156-5 (also: Oestrich-Winkel, Europ. Business School, dissertation, 2006).
  • Norbert Preuß: Real Estate Life Cycle. In: ders., Lars Schöne: Real Estate and Facility Management. From the perspective of consulting practice. 4th, revised and expanded edition. Springer, Berlin / Heidelberg 2016, ISBN 978-3-662-48291-9 , pp. 11–92.