Friday, July 17, 2026

The Trades


“Don’t forget about the trades.”

The reminder came from our neighbor, Rudy, a lifelong tradesman. If you’ve read this column for any length of time, you’ve heard me mention him before. He’s one of my biggest supporters, an avid reader, and every so often he’ll stop me to challenge something I’ve written or offer a perspective I hadn’t considered.

This time, his message was different.

There was pride in his voice, certainly. But there was also disappointment. His concern was that too many young people have been encouraged to pursue white collar careers while overlooking professions that literally built America. Plumbers. Electricians. Carpenters. Concrete finishers. Welders. Heavy equipment operators. HVAC technicians. The list goes on.

His words stuck with me.

Coincidentally, just days earlier I had listened to a long-form conversation between former Navy SEAL Sean Ryan and Mike Rowe, best known for Dirty Jobs. Rowe has spent years advocating for skilled trades through his mikeroweWORKS Foundation, whose mission is to close America’s skilled labor gap, challenge the stigma surrounding vocational careers, and promote the value of hard work.

The timing was hard to ignore.

Perhaps the universe was nudging me in the same direction as Rudy.

You may be wondering what any of this has to do with commercial real estate.

Everything.

Every industrial building we lease, every office we sell, every warehouse we reposition, every manufacturing facility we tour exists because skilled tradesmen and women transformed a set of architectural drawings into a functioning building.

When a company relocates, it isn’t simply a lease signing. Electricians install power. Carpenters build offices. Concrete crews reinforce slabs. Dock equipment is installed. Fire sprinkler contractors make modifications. HVAC specialists rebalance the system. Painters, flooring contractors, roofers and dozens of other trades bring a vacant shell to life.

Without them, our transactions would remain little more than paper.

The same is true for manufacturing. Machines don’t maintain themselves. Distribution centers don’t repair themselves. Buildings age. Equipment wears out. Communities grow because skilled people know how to build, repair and improve them.

Yet somewhere along the way, we’ve unintentionally created the impression that success only comes with a four-year degree and a desk.

That simply isn’t true.

Many skilled trades provide outstanding incomes, entrepreneurial opportunities, job security and the satisfaction of creating something tangible at the end of every day. They also offer something increasingly rare: demand that continues to outpace supply.

Commercial real estate professionals witness this every day. We don’t simply sell buildings. We watch businesses expand because talented people make products, move freight and solve problems with their hands as well as their minds.

Rudy reminded me of something important.

The trades deserve more than our appreciation. They deserve our encouragement.

If you’re a parent, expose your children to the possibilities. If you’re an employer, invest in apprenticeships. If you’re a business leader, celebrate the craftsmen and women whose work makes yours possible.

America has always been built by people willing to roll up their sleeves.

Let’s make sure the next generation knows there is honor, opportunity and tremendous value in doing exactly that.

Allen C. Buchanan, SIOR, is a principal with Lee & Associates Commercial Real Estate Services in Orange. He can be reached at abuchanan@lee-associates.com or 714.564.7104. His website is allencbuchanan.blogspot.com.
 
 

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