Companies are re-thinking their plans about leasing high cost real estate in large cities in the post COVID world. The tech sector is likely to shift to work at home rather than in the office -- thereby avoiding expensive commercial leases in cities like New York and San Francisco -- even paying expensive terminations clauses to get out of leases. The latest example... Pinterest pays $89.5 million to terminate San Francisco office leas https://www.sfgate.com/business/article/Pinterest-terminate-SF-office-lease-88-Bluxome-15525421.php Pinterest, a social-sharing site popular for pinning recipes, home inspiration and more, has canceled its large San Francisco office lease. The lease was for 88 Bluxome, a high-rise complex to-be-constructed near Pinterest's existing San Francisco headquarters. The company cited a shift to work-from-home due to the coronavirus pandemic in its decision. Pinterest will keep its current city offices, however. "As we analyze how our workplace will change in a post-COVID world, we are specifically rethinking where future employees could be based," Pinterest Chief Financial Officer Todd Morgenfeld said in a statement Friday. "A more distributed workforce will give us the opportunity to hire people from a wider range of backgrounds and experiences." The termination fee for the 490,000-square-foot office space is $89.5 million, Bloomberg reports. Eighty-eight Bluxome, located in China Basin adjacent to the 4th and King Caltrain station, is one of the city's most ambitious new developments. When completed, it will have two office high-rises, ground-floor retail shops, 12 indoor tennis courts and multiple swimming pools. Pinterest's lease was signed with Alexandria Real Estate Equities Inc. Pinterest's change of plans is just the latest indicator that the Bay Area's business districts may look very different for years to come. Facebook, Apple and Twitter have indicated work-from-home may extend far into the future, with much of their work force potentially staying remote even after the coronavirus pandemic ends. Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey told employees they will be able to work remotely permanently, if they so desire. The change in working life may also trigger a change in Bay Area demographics. In an anonymous survey of 4,400 tech workers, two-thirds of respondents said they would consider leaving the region permanently if allowed to work from home.
The only way out for all this office space vacancy is to convert office space to condominiums which will depress the urban condo market such as NYC, SF. I am sure Biden would want to give away a portion to the homeless, see how that works out with the rich urban condo dwellers.
They just built three class A office buildings within 2 blocks of each other here in coconut grove. Built completed during covid talk about timing
I think they'll open a remote office in a cheap country soon. I've read that the same specialists in Mexico or Argentina get three times less than workers in the US https://bridgeteams.com/product/. So everybody will get that it's more beneficial to pay less rent (or not to pay it at all) and pay less their employees.
%% That's true. Wonder if Portland had anything to do with them paying $89 million cancel fee?? The 2 comments I hear most often about SF realty is many like it+ its overpriced/especially for homes.That survey noted 2/3 would leave SF area, if allowed to work from home