Quote:
Originally Posted by 3rd&Brown
For sure the hybrid model is here to stay but for people to act like nobody is going back to the office ever again are completely offbase.
I've been commuting to the WTC in NY 2X a week for my job and every day my Amtrak train is oversold. Anyone who gets on in Trenton is standing. This has been the case every week since the beginning of March. I transfer at Newark Penn to the PATH and yesterday the PATH trains were shoulder to shoulder.
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I feel like I've been one of the most vocal critics here of what I believe is a completely misguided effort to push people back into the office full time and even I totally agree that of course people will still go into the office.
I never go into the office, but I also currently have a 4 year old and a newborn. In general, I'd honestly be in the office most days. I enjoy walking to work, I enjoy getting out of my house, I enjoy having a separate place distinct from my residence where I work.
When I say to forget it, no one is ever going back to how it was before, I definitely don't mean to say no one is ever going back into work. Philadelphia should be proactive in trying to think of what the future of white collar work looks like. Maybe everyone has smaller offices in center city, but that can also create opportunities. Maybe with people coming into the office less, having an office downtown matters less? Maybe this opens the door to more offices and jobs headquartered in other neighborhoods? Maybe zoning needs to be loosened so smaller flexible office spaces can be built in residential neighborhoods.
My point is simply, it's not a bad thing that companies in Philly more than most places don't foresee a return to 40 hour workweeks in an office. Regardless of how hard a city pushes for something like that, it ain't happening and it's best not to waste effort on a pipe dream. Rather than trying to get back to 2019, we need to be thinking about what 2025 will look like.
I agree the hybrid model is here to stay, and with Philadelphia's highly populous downtown, we're already in a position to be hurt by this change less than nearly every city in America. If we play this right, this could be very advantageous for this city.