Not even a mention of Calgary in this article.
'Toronto's rate has climbed about 10 percentage points. It was at 4.2 per cent in the fourth quarter of 2019. Today, it's 14.7 per cent. Vancouver's rate nearly tripled from 4.1 per cent pre-pandemic to 11.5 per cent today.
Montreal's vacancy rate went from 9.5 per cent in 2019 to 17.4 per cent today and at least one report suggests it may climb to 29 per cent by 2027.'
Calgary was just ahead of the curve, they're all now catching up. Welcome to our nightmare, jump in, the water is warm.
'"I think the days of coming in, sitting at your desk and [working] nine to five are over," said Raymond Wong, operations vice-president in charge of data at the commercial real estate firm Altus Group.
Office vacancy rate data compiled by Altus Group shows a grim trend.'
I'm posting this as I work from home, so it's pretty real for me. I'm about to pack up and head into the office for the rest of the day. But if I don't have to be there all day, I'm not going to be.
Simply providing a desk and an internet connection isn't enough. D'lorio says workers have grown accustomed to working from home. Drawing them back into an office space will require landlords to consider what those workers need.
"Having daycare facilities for children, having gyms and showers so that people can bike in and allowing people that flexibility," D'lorio told CBC.
D'lorio (Luciano D’Iorio, regional president and managing partner at commercial real estate firm CDNGLOBAL Québec) isn't wrong, if the office was a better place to be I'm sure more people would go. For me it would be something as simple as a cool place to eat my lunch. Currently if I'm in the office I stay at my desk.
In a way the high office vacancy could be exciting. It's an opportunity to remake our downtowns in Canada. I assume we'll see more place step into the office to residential conversion game and more residential downtown will just naturally happen. But it's going to be a slow process.