New Yorkers start to return to offices in hybrid mode
NEW YORK: From large corporations calling employees back to business district skyscrapers to the return of lunchtime lines at salad bars: signs that workers are returning to New York’s offices, albeit in “hybrid” mode for now, are multiplying. Several companies emblematic of America’s financial capital are preparing for a huge inperson return of staff after 14 months of widespread teleworking and a vigorous vaccination campaign.
JP Morgan Chase bank led the way at the end of April when it announced that it would bring all of its US staff back to the office on a “rotational” basis starting in early July. Then last week, fellow New York financial giant Goldman Sachs sent employees a memo telling them to prepare to return to the office from June 14. The instructions came around the same time that New York Governor Andrew Cuomo announced that most of New York’s pandemic-era restrictions will be lifted on May 19 as Covid-19 positivity rates, now around two percent, continue to fall. Local government is also making moves: City hall brought back 80,000 employees last Monday. The announcements accelerate a return-to-work movement that was just getting under way in America’s largest city. New York has taken a cautious approach to reopening after finding itself the early epicenter of the US’s outbreak in spring 2020.
Just 16 percent of workers had returned to offices at the end of April, up from 13 percent in January, according to Kastle Systems, which specializes in building security. “There’s definitely an upward trend, but it is an incremental trend,” Kastle Systems chairman Mark Ein told AFP. “It is a slowly building wave.”
New York occupancy rates are below the US average but some insiders are predicting a sharp increase in the next two months. “We’ve seen a dramatic shift,” said Craig Deitelzweig, president of Marx Realty, a company managing seven buildings in Midtown and Wall Street. Its occupancy rates passed 30 percent last week, against less than 20 percent previously. “The tenants who weren’t back were saying September and now we’re hearing June or July, some even in May,” he said.
‘Optimism’
Potential clients scouting out new offices have also picked up, he said, with many expressing a demand for outdoor spaces and windows that open - not always the case in Manhattan skyscrapers. “Before I would look through my window at the avenue and there would not be a single person on the sidewalk,” said Robert Byrnes, president of the East Midtown Partnership, a business association. “Now, it is still not packed, but I can see a few dozen people from my window. There’s definitely a sense of optimism,” he added.