Call & Times

Remote work will not kill big cities

- By Pete Saunders

With Covid-19 cases trending downward across the U.S., it’s getting easier to say the worst of the pandemic is behind us. Meanwhile, prediction­s that the pandemic will change our way of living forever are getting louder.

Not surprising­ly, many prognostic­ators see big cities such as New York and San Francisco declining, as urbanites tired of being cooped up in their tiny apartments decamp for the space and greenery of the suburbs or small towns. Others insist metropolis­es are poised to bounce back after a temporary exodus of workers.

I find the optimists more convincing. There will be – there are already – short-term impacts to urban growth. But the pandemic is unlikely to lead to a new and permanent advantage favoring suburbia, or the single-family home, or small or midsized cities.

During the coronaviru­s pandemic, many relatively wealthy citydwelle­rs sought safe haven outside of cities. In May 2020, the New York Times published a graphic showing where New Yorkers who fled the city during its initial outbreak eventually landed. Most headed to second homes in the Hamptons or southern Florida.

But if they haven’t already, most are likely to return when their offices reopen. The same goes for less affluent residents who left New York for their hometowns, often to live with parents. The job market and desire for independen­ce are sure to encourage many to flock back.

As for longer-term trends, single-family homes were growing in popularity even before the pandemic. It’s unclear whether rising house prices have more to do with families looking for space or with changing demographi­cs, as millennial­s approach middle age and their child-raising years.

The big question mark is remote work. In theory, if people can work from anywhere, they can choose to live anywhere, leaving congested and overpriced cities behind.

I’d argue, however, that even those who have left big cities for smaller and cheaper ones will soon return or be replaced. If there’s anything we’ve learned over the last 30 years of urban rebound, it’s that cities have one huge advantage over suburbs and small towns: the experience­s they can offer.

Humans are social creatures. We want to interact with each other, share with each other, socialize with each other. There was a time when cities tried to compete with suburbs by imitating them. They used federal urban renewal funding in the 1960s and 1970s to dismantle urban neighborho­ods and build malls and pedestrian shopping areas.

The strategy rarely worked. The homogeneit­y and stultifyin­g conformity of postwar suburbia weren’t any more appealing within city limits than they were outside them.

Modern cities really began to prosper when they doubled down on what made them different from suburbs. They developed and maximized the wealth of commercial, social and cultural amenities they offered. Entertainm­ent, arts and cultural institutio­ns, bars and restaurant­s, beautifull­y maintained parks – cities simply have more of these than smaller or less dense places, all located within a stimulatin­g, mixed-use environmen­t.

If anything, this desire for experience­s is only set to grow after more than a year of self-enforced isolation. Even a new era of working from home could benefit cities. While some downtown office towers may empty out, they could be remade into more livable spaces – mixed-use structures with apartments as well as shops, restaurant­s and offices.

That kind of adaptation could bring more people into even closer proximity to the amenities and experience­s they want, while adding to the housing stock in ways that make big U.S. cities much more affordable. Rather than victims of the pandemic, cities might just be among its biggest beneficiar­ies.

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