Chicago Sun-Times

Remote work is here to stay — at least two days a week, top mayoral aide says

- BY FRAN SPIELMAN, CITY HALL REPORTER fspielman@suntimes.com | @fspielman

The traditiona­l workweek that drew 600,000 employees to Chicago’s commercial office buildings Monday through Friday before the pandemic will be replaced by a “three-and-two hybrid” with two days of remote work, a top mayoral aide is predicting.

Michael Fassnacht, newly appointed CEO of the public-private job growth agency known as World Business Chicago, said the stay-at-home shutdown that forced employees to work from home — if they could — has created an appetite for remote work that will survive COVID-19 and all its variants.

“Long term, I believe the majority of workers will be back. But clearly, it’s a much more hybrid world. I expect that most companies will go to a three-andtwo [schedule]. So you’d be required to be three days working in the office and two days working either from home or traveling,” Fassnacht said Wednesday.

In a wide-ranging interview with the Sun-Times, Fassnacht said there are “three key sources of traffic” to the downtown core: the everyday workforce, which will “change long term, but not to the extent a lot of people are predicting”; convention­eers; and tourists, both those driving from surroundin­g suburbs as well as others traveling from the East and West coasts.

“We have to have a much bigger share of leisure tourists than in the past,” he said.

Fassnacht noted 18 months into the pandemic, 30% to 40% of the downtown workforce has returned to the Central Business District at least three days a week.

“That’s not just a Chicago challenge. Every single city is facing this. … We cannot just go back to the pre-pandemic times . ... We have to adapt. If there are fewer people longer term coming to work, how can we keep the city attractive? How can we make sure that people come on the weekends, during the week to Chicago — not just for work?” he said.

How Chicago answers that question will go a long way toward determinin­g whether the city’s downtown core can survive a permanent change in commuting patterns.

Fassnacht believes the answer lies in “reinventin­g attraction­s” and filling empty commercial space along Michigan Avenue and State Street with “experienti­al retail.”

“Look at Starbucks Reserve. The Starbucks Reserve store on the Mag Mile is not just a coffee shop. That is experienti­al retail. You have people driving an hour to visit and spend money. The store is doing extremely well. You need other places like that where people say, ‘This is a destinatio­n I want to experience,’” Fassnacht told the Sun-Times.

Target took a close look at the giant hole at Water Tower Place created by Macy’s exodus, only to take a pass — to the relief of Cook County Treasurer Maria Pappas, a Mag Mile resident who considered the discount retailer not nearly highbrow enough for Chicago’s marquee shopping district.

Fassnacht refused to discuss current negotiatio­ns with Brookfield Properties, owners of Water Tower Place. He would only say that Macy’s replacemen­t must be a “destinatio­n for people living close by, people living in the suburbs and people coming from London.”

“We have to re-frame these spaces. It’s always like, ‘What’s the next Macy’s moving in?’ That’s the wrong framing. The framing has to be: What is the developmen­t attracting destinatio­ns for all of us and for people who come for convention­s who will go there?”

A few years ago, downtown Ald. Brian Hopkins (2nd) blocked Dave & Buster’s from moving into Water Tower Place at the behest of local residents who feared violent groups of young people would be drawn to the gaming arcade during warm weather months.

Fassnacht was asked whether he now was thinking of a similar retailer or an entertainm­ent venue that includes live music.

“All of the above. We have to look at everything. Ultimately, the owners of these stores will make these decisions. But we have to be creative. We have to be innovative. My key filter is, it has to be attractive and relevant. That’s what we are looking for,” he said.

Fassnacht called Friday’s return of Chicago’s mask mandate, triggered by a surge in cases tied to the Delta variant, a “temporary setback” that may cost Chicago’s rebounding convention and tourism industry “six to eight weeks.”

Even so, he has not altered the prediction he made to Chicago aldermen last month: That strong bookings at McCormick Place and Navy Pier mean both venues “should be back to pre-COVID numbers by the end of the year.”

 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE ?? Michael Fassnacht
SUN-TIMES FILE Michael Fassnacht

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