Cushman & Wakefield Releases In-Depth Report Providing Blueprint to Reimagine Cities

In This Article:

The first-of-its-kind study examines 15 U.S. cities to identify their current real estate portfolio and how that compares to the optimal product mix for thriving in the future

CHICAGO, September 19, 2024--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Cushman & Wakefield (NYSE: CWK), a leading global real estate services firm, today released Reimagining Cities: Disrupting the Urban Doom Loop—an in-depth research report that puts 15 U.S. cities under the microscope to identify the real estate portfolios cities currently have versus what they need, given how much the economy has changed post-pandemic. In doing so, a few key findings emerge.

  1. Cities, particularly economically important, walkable urban places near the core, violated portfolio theory in real estate markets. This is especially true for downtowns, where 70% of real estate square footage is currently office.

  2. There is an optimal product mix for real estate markets to move towards. This optimal mix, for most cities, on average, is 42% Work (office, owner-occupied, GSA), 32% Live (for-sale and multifamily rental housing) and 26% Play (retail, hotel and other sports/entertainment).

  3. Reimagining these walkable urban places will yield dividends for all stakeholders in the city. These small, walkable pockets of cities account for only 3% of the city’s landmass, 25% of the city’s real estate footprint, but 37% of city tax revenues and 57% of city GDP. If these places fail, the entire city suffers.

Developed in partnership with Places Platform, LLC, a real estate solutions technology company co-founded by coauthor Christopher B. Leinberger, who is also the Charles Bendit Distinguished Scholar & Emeritus Professor and Chair, Center for Real Estate & Urban Analysis at George Washington University School of Business, Reimagining Cities looks at the recent past and probable future for 15 key U.S. cities—addressing critical questions about their economic health, how "doom loops" can manifest, and how they can be reversed into "virtuous cycles."

The report details four key strategies needed to revitalize cities and downtowns to ensure they remain vibrant and engaging, including:

  1. Decreasing the share of real estate dedicated to Work, especially in downtowns;

  2. Increasing the share of space dedicated to Live, particularly in downtowns;

  3. Boosting the ratio of for-sale housing within Live; and

  4. Enhancing the Play component, to drive incremental foot traffic from visitors

"Our study is really a call to action," said Kevin Thorpe, Cushman & Wakefield’s Global Chief Economist. "Some of our great cities and downtowns are at risk of entering into an urban doom loop, which is a very difficult cycle to break. The bottom line is a portion of the real estate most cities have today made sense for the economy 20 years ago, pre-hybrid work, but do not make sense for the economy today. Our downtowns and central cities are transforming with the knowledge economy, but also with the experience economy. Cities are increasingly about experience and consumption, and not just knowledge sector production. From this study, we now have the data, we know where the problems are, and we know what the solutions are. Doom loops are not inevitable, but the time to take action is now."