BC Business Magazine

DIGITAL’S DOMAIN

WHY TECH CAN'T GET ENOUGH OF DOWNTOWN

- by Michael Mccullough // por t r ait by Alana Paterson

Along bustling Westlake Avenue, running up a gentle incline from South Lake Union to the highrise heart of Seattle, about half the lunch-hour pedestrian­s and patrons sitting on café patios sport the distinctiv­e blue lanyard and badge of the Amazon.com Inc. employee. The world’s preeminent digital retailer and cloud services provider employs more than 30,000 people spread over 30 buildings here. And its presence is growing, in size and visibility. Between two of its newest office towers, Amazon is building a glass-walled conservato­ry in the shape of giant golf balls where employees will be able to hold meetings or just chill out, surrounded by tropical foliage. What the company is doing has generated so much curiosity that, in 2016, it began offering public walking tours of select buildings twice a week.

Faced with a space crunch in 2009, tour guide Allison Flicker explains, founder and CEO Jeff Bezos and his team explored the option of relocating to the suburbs where Amazon might build its own campus in the fashion of its informatio­n technology peers like Microsoft Corp. and Apple Inc. But they decided to stay and grow in the central business district. The feedback from employees was that they overwhelmi­ngly preferred to work downtown. It was easy to get to, especially for the 55 per cent of staff who didn’t drive to work. And it just had a better atmosphere, tied into a neighbourh­ood with a variety of restaurant­s and other amenities instead of sequestere­d in suburban isolation.

Today Amazon is by far the largest private-sector employer in Seattle. The company issues maps to employees to help them find their way to its various buildings. Thanks to its policy allowing staff to bring their dogs to work—more than 2,000 dogs are registered—canine grooming salons dot the neighbourh­ood. And though this is downtown, spotting someone wearing a tie on the street or in an elevator is a rare occurrence.

Amazon is by no means the only technology player transformi­ng the downtown of a major city. In San Francisco, Salesforce.com will move into an eponymous 61-storey tower, the tallest in the city, in the spring of 2018. Linkedin Corp. recently relocated its head office from Mountain View, California, to another new skyscraper by the Bay. Uber Technologi­es Inc. is also building a San Francisco headquarte­rs, this one a midrise, but still 420,000 square feet. Zappos.com is almost single-handedly trying to revive the dowdy downtown of Las Vegas.

The tech takeover has been observed beyond North America, too, in cities including London and Berlin. It’s even happening in China. Tencent Holdings Ltd., which developed the world’s premier messaging app, Wechat, is building side-by-side towers connected by walkways that will provide workspace for 12,000 employees in Shenzhen, just inland from Hong Kong. Perhaps not surprising­ly, the complex is designed by the same architectu­re firm responsibl­e for Amazon’s Spheres.

The phenomenon is also happening in Vancouver, subtly changing the character of the city’s downtown in the process. Last year Microsoft Corp. took over two floors of the Nordstrom block anchoring the Pacific Centre mall. Where shoppers once browsed the aisles of Eaton’s (then Sears’s) B.C. flagship, today coders sip lattes and nibble healthy snacks between sessions working on Onenote, MSN and Skype for Business. Another 3.5-acre floor of the same building is occupied by animation and digital effects house Sony Imageworks. And with 1,300 staff filling a former fashion warehouse in nearby Yaletown, SAP is among the largest employers on the downtown peninsula, period.

Informatio­n technology and digital media companies accounted for 36.7 per cent of the demand for office space in downtown Vancouver in the second quarter of this year, according to leasing company Colliers Internatio­nal (down from 42 per cent a year earlier). They already occupy 21.8 per cent of downtown office space, putting tech in league with finance and profession­al services as an occupant of space. That’s up from virtually nothing 20 years ago.

Breaking out of the burbs

The dot-com boom of the late 1990s was largely a suburban business-park phenomenon. Its nodes included Redmond, Washington (home of Microsoft), Burnaby (where Electronic Arts Inc.’s largest video-game studio has its own soccer pitch) and, for that matter, all of Silicon Valley.

Many of these leafy redoubts remain tech hotbeds, but the industry’s recent expansion has almost all been in the centre of the city. Twitter Inc. set a Bay Area trend in 2012 when, upon going public, instead of decamping to the Valley as expected, it doubled down on San Francisco’s central business district. It took advantage of city incentives to spruce

The things millennial employees appreciate: good transit access, city amenities and, within the space, an open, collaborat­ive environmen­t where they’re not chained to a desk —Edoardodem­artin, Microsoftc­anada

up a vacant art deco landmark on Market Street, the city’s distressed main drag. Twitter’s move wasn’t an unmitigate­d success; beset by earnings misses, the company is reportedly subletting 30 per cent of its space. But other tech companies, large and small, followed its geographic­al lead.

Whereas the first tech firms to venture downtown came for character properties around the fringes with their bare brick walls and timber beams overhead, today’s downtown nouveau riche favour custombuil­t or -renovated AAA space. In Vancouver, IT firms have engaged in a kind of turf war, each looking for that iconic space and location that will appeal most to talented young hires. “I don’t think there’s a space like this in Vancouver,” boasts Edoardo De Martin, director of the Microsoft Canada Excellence Centre above the Nordstrom store. He cites the things millennial employees appreciate: good transit access, city amenities and, within the space, an open, collaborat­ive environmen­t where they’re not chained to a desk. “This space is more amenable to the demographi­c we’re hiring,” De Martin says.

When SAP Labs Vancouver (which was founded as Crystal Services and has gone through a series of owners including Seagate Software, Crystal Decisions and Business Objects) set up shop downtown in the 1980s, it was an anomaly in IT, recalls managing director Kirsten Sutton. But even then the location “was a huge attractor of talent,” she says. It just made life simpler for young programmer­s who already gravitated to apartment living in the city. Many of those early hires now have families and live in the suburbs, Sutton says, but even for them the company’s Yaletown site is accessible by transit at all hours. As for more recent hires from the millennial generation, the central location is pretty much expected. Only 16 per cent of employees at SAP Labs drive to work. Many, especially the younger ones, don’t own a car at all.

SAP just renovated the space over the past two years and signed a new 10-year lease. Instead of building a cafeteria, as the German multinatio­nal has done at most of its other offices around the world, SAP Labs Vancouver runs a program called Lunch on Us whereby employees receive a gift card they can use at any of 52 restaurant­s in the surroundin­g neighbourh­ood. “When a new restaurant opens in Yaletown, right away they are knocking on our door wanting to be on that card,” Sutton says.

Among the most recent generation of IT startups, a suburban location was seldom even considered. “We looked here and in Gastown for places, probably because it’s just a little more interestin­g,” says Stewart Butterfiel­d while showing off the Yaletown office of messaging app maker Slack, a company he founded jointly in San Francisco and Vancouver in 2014. It’s easy to meet people from other companies and visitors from out of town in a central location, he explains, and most of the 100 or so Vancouver employees (none of whom appears to be over 40) live in the city proper. Immigrants and other recruits from out of town gravitate to the centre of things. But it makes sense for suburbanit­es, too. “If you live in Burnaby, having an office in Burnaby is super nice,” Butterfiel­d says. “But if you live in Richmond, having an office in Burnaby is a pain.”

Tech’s growing clout

It’s possible at least some of the current demand for urban office space reflects the cyclical high the technology industry is experienci­ng after a decade of underinves­tment following the dot-com bust. Also, the exchange rate may be contributi­ng to tech sector demand in Canadian cities, says Colliers vicepresid­ent Matt Carlson, who chairs the company’s national technology practice. Whether domestic or multinatio­nal, most IT firms earn revenue in U.S.

SAP Labs Vancouver runs a program called Lunch on Us whereby employees receive a gift card they can use at any of 52 restaurant­s in the surroundin­g neighbourh­ood

dollars, he points out. “Our export is skilled workers,” Vancouver-based Carlson says. “These American dollars are buying Canadian talent at a 20 per cent discount right now.”

But there are reasons to believe tech’s urban invasion will be permanent, and transforma­tive to the city landscape. In 2011, venture capitalist Marc Andreessen wrote a much-shared op-ed column in the Wall Street Journal that expounded his view of “Why software is eating the world.” IT developers were devising new ways to deliver goods and services to customers that would see them take over swaths of the economy, Andreessen argued, using the examples of Amazon, Netflix and Apple’s itunes. (Uber wasn’t even around yet.) Instead of working in factories, in the future people will increasing­ly work in offices developing the software to run the robots that do the factory jobs.

Six years later, Andreessen’s scenario appears to be playing out. Convention­al revenue figures tend to underestim­ate the impact of the technology industry, partly because many players are in the precommerc­ialization stage. But The State of Canada’s Tech Sector, 2016 by the Brookfield Institute, a Toronto-based think tank, uses some different methodolog­y to show that technology is a far greater force in the Canadian economy than widely thought. Tech represents $117 billion in gross domestic product, or 7.1 per cent of the overall economy, the report states, putting it fifth among all industries—after real estate, manufactur­ing, mining/oil and gas, and constructi­on. Its 71,000 firms (6.1 per cent of all companies) employ 864,000 people (5.6 per cent of the national labour force) and account for the lion’s share of private sector research and developmen­t, at $9.1 billion. In Vancouver and Halifax, tech is second only to retail trade as a source of employment.

What Andreessen and other heralds of the tech takeover didn’t anticipate, or were less interested in, was just where this new post-industrial workforce would want to be located. And make no mistake, some notable non-technology companies— Mcdonald’s Corp. and Kraft Heinz Co. in Chicago, General Electric Co. in Boston—have also been making the trek downtown from the burbs. North American downtowns are generally cleaner, safer and more appealing to all kinds of enterprise­s and their workers than they were a few decades ago. But these other industries don’t have the same potential as technology to transform the urban landscape, for a couple of reasons. First, technology was never downtown in a big way before now. IBM Corp. was founded in upstate New York; Hewlett-packard Co., in a Palo Alto garage. So the industry’s incursion into downtown office space is unpreceden­ted.

Second, where companies in other industries might just locate head-office functions such as finance, legal and marketing in their highrise urban HQS, tech companies bring the people who actually create the core product or service. Amazon expects to have 50,000 employees in Seattle by 2026—more than aerospace titan Boeing Co., long the metropolit­an region’s leading employer, ever had in suburban Everett, Washington. Indeed, it foresees a day when it will outgrow the city, floating a plan to establish a second headquarte­rs in another North American city. It’s as if North America’s industrial heartland is increasing­ly accessed by elevator.

“The tech sector is becoming ever more critical by the day to the Canadian office market, with technology firms accounting for 16.1 per cent of all major office lease deals in Canada last year,” said Raymond Wong, head of research at CBRE Canada, following the November 2016 release of a report on the industry by the commercial real estate firm. “This percentage increases markedly in our larger urban areas—for example, tech accounted for 43 per cent of all leases in Ottawa last year—and it’s a trend we only see growing in the years to come.”

In fact, non-technology companies are choosing to locate their technology-related functions downtown, too. Boeing recently opted to set up a 50-person analytics lab in Yaletown rather than at its existing operations centre at Vancouver Internatio­nal Airport. Fast-food giant Subway IP Inc. recently bought Avanti Commerce Inc., an online ordering specialist in downtown Vancouver, and plans to make the outfit a hub for its 150-employee digital group. As University of California, Irvine, business professor Vijay Gurbaxani wrote last year in the Harvard Business Review, “the current business environmen­t requires all leaders to view their companies as software businesses—and think like software executives.”

A less diverse downtown?

As for the tech sector itself, cities are now attracting and retaining companies at every stage of

“The tech sector is becoming ever more critical by the day to the Canadian office market, with technology firms accounting for 16.1 per cent of all major office lease deals in Canada last year” —Raymondwon­g, CBRE Canada

their developmen­t. Research by urban theorist Richard Florida indicates that San Francisco now attracts more venture capital investment than all of Silicon Valley, while New York City has in recent years emerged as a leading startup hub. In a paper published this year, Startup City: The Urban Shift in Venture Capital and High Technology, the University of Toronto professor found correlatio­ns between VC investment and social diversity—the prevalence of gay people and immigrants, for example—but not with some assumed lures, such as medical centres and universiti­es, more commonly found in outlying communitie­s.

“While large urban centers have historical­ly been sources of venture capital, the high-tech startups they funded were mainly, if not exclusivel­y, located in suburban campuses in California’s Silicon Valley, Boston’s Route 128 corridor, the Research Triangle of North Carolina, and in the suburbs of Austin and Seattle,” Florida wrote. “But high-tech developmen­t, startup activity, and venture investment have recently begun to shift to urban centers and also to close-in, mixed-use, transit-oriented, walkable suburbs.”

Earlier generation­s of coders were content to drive 45 minutes or more to a suburban campus, but the millennial­s that companies are hiring today prefer to live and work in the city, leasing agent Carlson says. They want easy, 24-hour transit access and amenities such as restaurant­s, bars and fitness clubs in close proximity. Tenants in IT commonly ask for things like secure bike storage and showers, along

Earlier generation­s of coders were content to drive 45 minutes or more to a suburban campus, but the millennial­s that companies are hiring today prefer to live and work in the city

with large floorplate­s amenable to collaborat­ion. Compared with finance or profession­al services tenants, they fit more workstatio­ns in a given area yet also demand more amenity space.

More than just landlords are having to adapt to the tech industry’s arrival. The influx of technology workers has Dunn’s Tailors selling more casual shirts and pants than it used to, says Jordan Smith, general manager of the 81-yearold downtown Vancouver haberdashe­ry. “IT guys aren’t suits,” Smith says, though he’s had people run into his shop in a panic saying they have a meeting in Toronto the next day and need to buy one.

Hy’s Steakhouse & Cocktail Bar, a downtown institutio­n for 55 years, now caters to software developers the way it once welcomed Howe Street stockbroke­rs and forest and mining executives. They may not wear jackets and ties, but they’re just as apt to splurge on a carnivorou­s dinner, says general manager Chris Langridge. “When [social media company Hootsuite Media Inc.] hits their targets, they’ll take the team out for dinner at Hy’s,” he says. “It’s a thing they have going there.”

If there’s a problem, it’s that a few tech-happy cities like Vancouver and Seattle may get too much of a good thing and lose some of their diversity and vitality as a result. It wasn’t just the employees’ preference that prompted Amazon to stay downtown back in 2009. CEO Bezos had his own reasons: he thought the suburban option would stifle workers’ creativity and disconnect them from their customers. “Jeff believed that, working in a city, they are more vibrant and engaged because they are not surrounded by folks who are working at Amazon. They are around people who work at other companies who have many other different kinds of jobs,” tour guide Flicker says.

Amazon’s current expansion plans, however, call for this one company to occupy more than a fifth of Seattle’s downtown office inventory (some 10 million square feet) by 2019. As the everlarger tech industry clusters in urban cores, the people tech workers encounter on the street and in the elevators may stop looking so diverse and start to look increasing­ly just like them.

 ??  ?? COMFORT ZONE Slack's Hamilton Street office features exposed bricks and beams, plus a wall clad in dried moss
COMFORT ZONE Slack's Hamilton Street office features exposed bricks and beams, plus a wall clad in dried moss
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 ??  ?? CITY CENTRE Microsoft Canada's 142,000square-foot facility in Vancouver can accommodat­e 700 software developers
CITY CENTRE Microsoft Canada's 142,000square-foot facility in Vancouver can accommodat­e 700 software developers
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