The Morning Call (Sunday)

Type All Day, Toast All Night: The Rise of Remote-Work Weddings

Nuptials are stretching out well into the workweek.

- By Julie Weed

A GROWING NUMBER of wedding guests are bringing a new kind of plus-one to the festivitie­s: their remote jobs.

When Anna Sullivan, a 25-yearold who works in digital marketing, and Taylor Brandenber­ger, a 26-year-old home inspector, got married last October in East Lansing, Mich., 10 of the bride’s friends started the wedding weekend a few days early. They rented an Airbnb where they could work remotely during the day and then got together for dinner and hangouts in the evening, all without taking any time off.

Many of the guests even stayed through Monday, flying home in the evening after they had logged off. “The wedding day goes by in a blur,” the bride, who has since changed her last name to Brandenber­ger, said. “Having the extra time with people was so valuable.”

Since the height of the pandemic, remote work has dramatical­ly changed both offices and those who work in them. After initially being forced to work from home, many employees now enjoy all-remote or hybrid schedules. According to the Pew Research Center, one-third of American workers currently have some freedom to work remotely, even if it is just one or two days a week.

Wedding guests who have hybrid schedules are increasing­ly using them to spend a few more days wherever the celebratio­n takes them, and hotels, wedding planners and couples are taking note and making changes.

Attendance may even hinge on the possibilit­y of remote work. The Brandenber­gers planned their ceremony and reception on a Friday night to save money on renting the space. That meant some guests from out of town who had to be physically at work that day and couldn’t take time off weren’t able to attend, Ms. Brandenber­ger said.

Some couples choose to make a weekend destinatio­n out of their ceremony. Such weddings have long been a boon to hotels and resorts, many of which also added work spaces and upgraded their Wi-Fi to cater to remote workers during the pandemic. Now the two trends are converging.

At Camptown, a 50-room hotel that opened last year in Leeds,

N.Y., at the foot of the Catskill Mountains, wedding-related stays have been getting longer, said Stephen Wendell, chief executive of Mountain Shore Properties, which owns the hotel. When guests realize they can work from the lodge, which offers high-speed internet and work spaces, he said, “they start thinking about relaxing and getting into wedding mode and extending their bookings.”

Currently, about 20 percent of wedding guests arrive at Camptown from Tuesday to Thursday for a weekend ceremony, Mr. Wendell said: “You see people at the pool with laptops, taking calls on the nature paths.”

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JAMES SHANNON

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