Jeffrey: We started work on The Spiral (a steel high-rise at New York City’s 66 Hudson Boulevard) before COVID. And as it turns out, a building with access to the outdoors, and a beautiful entry environment, is ideal for creating a workspace that people want to return to. It turned out to be the model post-COVID office building, even though it wasn’t planned to be. But now that we’re in a post-COVID environment, we can see what people request in real time. And my personal view is, we’re going to have people working from home for a long time, but not totally. Partially. Creating a more user-friendly office environment is critical to getting people back.
Carol: Office buildings were already being reimagined, and the pandemic may have accelerated it. So the trend before COVID was that there were more collaboration spaces, more breakout spaces. Then COVID hit and we didn’t work on any design of office buildings during COVID. And I think now those same trends will continue and will be even more important because employees are wanting to collaborate. The face-to-face collaboration is wonderful. There’s nothing better than walking over to a colleague and asking, ‘Hey, can we have your opinion?’ So, I love the collaboration aspect and think the trend of having more breakout spaces will be accelerated even further.
Jason: I think everyone’s in a bit of an experimentation stage right now. Many companies are embracing some form of hybrid work. That’s had an impact on the way they look at their office footprints. In some cases, they’re saying, we’re not going to need as much square footage in our overall portfolio of office space. So, let’s look at the right ways to trim back and keep the meaningful space. With one company we were working with recently, it was about teams gathered in the office, and many times after finishing a project they wanted to celebrate these milestones. And so they’re taking spaces in their building and looking at how you could use the office space or convert it into that kind of celebration space.