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Originally Posted by the urban politician
^ Wow, that is exactly what I’ve heard. I shared before that a lady from the Bay Area also noted that SF was totally dead while Chicago last summer felt lively
Some of it is the fact that some West Coast people have gotten positively goofy about the pandemic (my friend from LA who is a doctor says he talks to people who are young and healthy who discuss keeping their windows open in order to protect themselves from Covid. ). But I can’t help to think that a part of it is SF just being so tech oriented that it’s sort of gone overboard. So many nerdy software types who just work from home and order deliveries every day, and are otherwise socially awkward.
Chicago has that element but it’s still a business, trading, and salesman kind of town and I hope it stays that way.
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We've met a few realtors since being back who indicated there's been a little uptick of late (last few months) of people from the Bay Area looking to buy homes in Chicago. People who don't want to spend $3M for a normal home but can afford $1M - $1.5M on a great house in Chicago.
I've only been back for 3 months as a resident, but I go into the office in the Loop a few times a week. Definitely more people on average in the Loop now than 3 months ago. Some of that is the Christkindlmarkt but there's a lot of uptick that did not feel like it was just the market. The Urbanspace food hall has been absolutely packed the 3-5 times I've gone. I work in a large office tower too and December definitely had a lot more people coming and going in the lobby than October.
As mentioned about employment before too, which part of it may tie in even with hybrid work going on.
City propers, change in employed persons Feb 2020 - November 2021. Chicago is not that far below its Feb 2020 employment count for residents. Doing a bit better than most of its peer cities and better than others which everyone believes is doing really well (i.e. Miami):
* Jacksonville: +4.79%
* Phoenix: +4.13%
* Austin: +4.1%
* Tampa: +3.65%
* Portland: +3%
* Dallas: +2.94%
* Oklahoma City: +2.55%
* Fort Worth: +2.45%
* Milwaukee: +1.35%
* Kansas City: +1.34%
* Denver: +0.99%
* Memphis: +0.97%
* Raleigh: +0.96%
* Atlanta: +0.78%
* Indianapolis: +0.75%
* Tulsa: +0.66%
* Nashville: +0.48%
* Tucson: +0.31%
* Columbus, OH: +0.22%
* Cincinnati: -0.1%
* Charlotte: -0.6%
* Chicago: -0.95%
* Sacramento: -1.17%
* Louisville: -1.2%
* Houston: -1.5%
* Detroit: -1.61%
* Boston: -2.11%
* St. Louis: -2.17%
* San Jose: -2.35%
* Seattle: -2.71%
* DC: -2.71%
* San Diego: -2.78%
* Minneapolis: -2.8%
* Orlando: -2.94%
* San Francisco: -4.2%
* Cleveland: -4.35%
* Miami: -4.41%
* Pittsburgh: -4.5%
* Oakland: -4.72%
* Los Angeles: -5.04%
* Baltimore: -5.23%
* New Orleans: -5.84%
* Honolulu: -5.99%
* Philadelphia: -7.15%
* Las Vegas: -7.68%
* NYC: -8.34%