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Businesses Are Wooing Workers with Amenities<\/h2>\n\n\n\n
Large cities like New York and Chicago and well-planned secondary markets in the Smile Cities (Atlanta, Austin, Charlotte) boast myriad options for outside amenity spaces shared and patronized by neighboring businesses and residents. Bustling caf\u00e9s, restaurants, and even ball parks within an arm\u2019s reach encourage out-of-office social connection, trust-building, and corporate culture with an authentic local flavor.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Tech companies incentivized to flee their west coast offices for Atlanta, Charlotte, Ohio, and Texas, left portfolio holders with real estate sorely lacking in appropriate amenity spaces suitable to new tenants trying to attract quality talent. Especially where it\u2019s been challenging to convince workers to go back to an office, commute-worthy experiences and amenity spaces allow employees to stay \u201con-campus,\u201d focused and engaged in hard work.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
In growing secondary markets such as Atlanta, Charlotte, Ohio, and Texas, successful projects integrate outward-facing, community amenities, including auditoriums, cafeterias, coffee shops, and informal gathering spaces. Spaces directed at the community encourage a building to be utilized 24-7, but a desire to serve the local community needs to be executed with more precision, research, and refinement, stressed the panelists.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
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Flexible Design May Not Be the Best Strategy<\/h2>\n\n\n\n
Flexibility is an emotional response across markets. Our panel connected the dots between the of fear of uncertainty driving the flexibility phenomenon. Demountable walls and reconfigurable furniture mitigate that anxiety; however, it rarely works in practice, because they require designated operations personnel, man hours, and effort to reconfigure, while facility people are in short supply.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Flexibility also requires solving for technology; specifically, powering devices. In a dynamic office landscape that offers workers multiple options for task-driven settings, providing enough power-on-demand has eluded designers and facility managers. Now, even ancillary furniture is expected to provide a comfortable, functional task perch. The entire panel agreed that there is a need for more beautiful, portable battery design, as furniture with USBs and power outlets are still coveted.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
The flexibility that hoteling, benching, and unassigned seating provides may not be the best strategy for post-traumatic growth or hybrid-first policies warns our panel; in fact, one of the most impactful ways to help employees feel grounded in uncertain times is by providing a designated place to land when they arrive.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
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Footprints Are Shrinking in Big Cities<\/h2>\n\n\n\n
Organizations with offices or headquarters in costly primary markets are investing in suburban hubs, or opening offices in second-city markets that are more resilient, thriving, and attractive to new college grads.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Companies in dense northeast cities are minimizing square foot per person by being precise about calculating occupancy rates to achieve higher quality, more refined heads-down workspaces. Progressive organizations across regions are making the cultural shift to support a holistic view of the employee experience; this might look like luxurious amenities, or access to facilities 24\/7.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Even when shrinking personal footprints, our panel suggested providing a neighborhood-style landscape that offers distinct topographies and several choices of where to work effectively. Companies can enhance the employee experience by clustering mixed floorplates of private offices, conference rooms, informal gathering niches, and functional phone booths near one\u2019s designated workspace.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
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The Desire for the 10-Minute City Is at an All-Time High<\/h2>\n\n\n\n
Companies in primary markets like Seattle and San Diego struggle to recruit young people because they cannot afford to live anywhere near the city, and they may face upwards of 2.5-hour commutes, which is unsustainable. Secondary markets\u2014like Austin and Charlotte that came equipped with infrastructure and amenities that attracted new companies, young workers, and subsequently tech companies\u2014have now grown congested and overpriced, observed our panelists.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
Fulton Market in Chicago is also a shining example of a place where people can live, work, play, and shop within a 20-minute loop. But generally, downtown Chicago and California urban cores lack residential towers and mixed-use neighborhoods. Looking ahead, watch for new, office-to-residential tower conversions trying to achieve what other live-work-play cities have blended to attract demographics that want to be in the thick of things.<\/p>\n\n\n\n
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The discussion was sponsored by\u00a0<\/em>Innovant<\/em><\/a>\u00a0and took place on April 4 at the Innovant showroom in the Merchandise Mart in Chicago. Roundtable participants included Mel Chotiner, director, Eastlake Studio; Peter Randolph, director, Eastlake Studio; Elizabeth Fallon, studio practice leader, HKS; Emily Merck, interior designer, HKS; Deborah Nemeth, designer leader, SmithGroup; Anne Gibson, principal, Nelson Worldwide; Kristin Cerutti, designer leader, Nelson Worldwide; Enza Parrella, principal, AECOM; Matt Rebbe, AECOM; Heather Cain, associate principal, Perkins Eastman; Madona L. Cumare-Malhotra, senior associate, Perkins Eastman; Neil Schneider, design director, IA Interior Architects; Erin Dayrit, senior designer, IA Interior Architects; Andrew Volckens, principal of the Chicago office, Huntsman; Julie Michiels, interior studio leader, SOM; Emily Frazer-Smith, Corgan; Sheyla Conforte, interiors executive director, Solomon Cordwell Buenz; Andrew Monaghan, design director, Solomon Cordwell Buenz; and Dane Rausch, interior design principal, HDR.<\/em><\/p>\n\n\n\n