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As remote work takes hold, Boston’s office market starts to wobble - The Boston Globe
Vacancy rates are at near-two-decade highs, and there are growing concerns that defaults and devaluations could ripple through the economy.
www.bostonglobe.com
Office vacancy across Boston, Cambridge, and the suburbs has risen, with the regional vacancy rate hitting 19.1 percent at the start of this year, its highest in nearly two decades, according to real estate firm JLL. Companies such as Verizon, Cengage, and Duck Creek Technologies are putting blocks of underutilized space up for sublease. And even corporate tenants who are looking for new office space are looking for less of it, as hybrid work policies have become routine.
Those impacts are rippling through the city’s office market. Just in the first three months of the year, companies in Greater Boston vacated more than 1.5 million square feet of office space — nearly a full Hancock Tower’s worth. And experts forecast more pain is ahead.
The squeeze is not being felt equally. Newer, Class A towers — think One Congress and One Post Office Square — are still drawing blue-chip tenants, while older Class B and C space increasingly looks less attractive. Of the 560,000 square feet in leases signed in Boston’s central business district in the first quarter, nearly 95 percent were in Class A buildings
And while this trend has been underway downtown for some time, these pressures are building in the suburbs too, where there are now about 4.5 million square feet of sublease space — space which a company has under lease but is offering to other tenants — on the market
Boston’s talented workforce has long been the bedrock of the city’s economic success, said JLL’s Daniels. Officials at both the city and state levels are focused on maintaining that competitive edge.
“In a downturn, people tend to return to where it works, and where they can get great employees,” Daniels said. “While we’re certainly having a different time than we had two or three years ago, and it’s not all rainbows and lollipops here, there’s reason to be optimistic.”
Several great images in this article. One of which is below:
Credit, Boston Globe.
It seems that during the golden hour, Boston's buildings turn orange.