The Standard (St. Catharines)

Signs point to return of at-office work

‘Downtown will be the catalyst for the GTA’S growth,’ report says

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new report suggests Toronto businesses are making plans to call employees back to the office.

The report, released last week by commercial real estate firm Avison Young, says office market activity in downtown Toronto

remains muted due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

The downtown office vacancy rate hit a new all-time high of 7.3 per cent in the second quarter, but the report suggests the market may be on the brink of recovery.

According to Avison Young, some companies that were trying to shed downtown office space on the sublet market are reversing course. Available sublet space fell for the first time in six quarters, ending the quarter at 288,000 square metres, or 32 per cent of available space downtown. The report suggests this is a sign that some Toronto businesses are anticipati­ng more employees will return to the office soon.

Some companies including TMX Group and Intelex Technologi­es have withdrawn sublet space from the market in part or altogether.

In addition, Netflix’s selection of Toronto for its Canadian headquarte­rs affirms Toronto’s status as a growing tech hub, the report said.

Other companies have already offered a glimpse into what return-to-work strategies could look like. Sun Life is allowing staff flexibilit­y to decide their own work arrangemen­ts, while Apple has asked its employees to return to the office three days a week starting in the fall.

The frequency of remote versus on-site work will vary by industry, function, and location, as well as personal circumstan­ces and preference­s, Avison Young said.

“Downtown will be the catalyst for the GTA’S growth when the market recovers,” Avison Young said in the report. “The possibilit­ies of a hybrid workplace have helped shift occupiers’ mindset from ‘will we ever return to the office?’ to ‘when and how?’ ”

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