Having become the darling of leasing
agents in recent years, technology companies around the world could now lead
the way in rethinking what a modern office should be.
“Tech has always been the industry that
has led the definition of great office space,” said Nicky Wightman, Savills’
head of emerging trends, on a webinar marking the agency’s latest Tech
Cities report.
“There’s the sense of an ecosystem as
well – we think of tech, we think of physical space and clusters. The next
stage of this is that we may see some redefinition of what great space looks
like, a re-evaluation of what space is for.”
Tech tenants have been big business for
landlords in recent years. Since the outbreak of Covid-19 there have still been
some large transactions, such as Facebook’s lease on all 730,000 sq ft of New
York’s Farley Building (pictured). But the pandemic has raised questions about whether that trend will continue,
particularly given the prevalence of homeworking at some tech giants.
“Across all our cities, tech companies
have been prolific in taking new office space in recent years, in many
instances overtaking financial services to become the single biggest occupier
group,” said Paul Tostevin, Savills’ head of world research.
“[But] while some big deals are
happening, others are being put on hold or space is being shed as occupiers in
the tech space re-evaluate their needs. Tech occupiers have really embraced
homeworking in the near term and that has also been contributing to rising levels
of subleased space.”
Nonetheless, Tostevin predicts that
“flagship tech HQs” such as Amazon’s Seattle base will “undoubtedly remain
important”.
“Big tech companies have invested very
heavily in their urban headquarters to attract the best staff,” he added.
“These are places to instil company value, for staff to come together and
collaborate, to attract the best talent, and are even testbeds for the very
technologies that these companies are producing.”
As part of Savills’ latest report, the
agency identified 12 “tech lifestyle cities” that it said are significant not
only as venture capital hotspots but also because factors such as their air
quality and green spaces will meet occupiers’ requirements around wellbeing.
The European cities to make that list
are Amsterdam, Barcelona, Berlin, Copenhagen, Dublin and Stockholm. Those are
joined by Austin, Boston, Denver and Seattle in the US, as well as Tel Aviv and
Melbourne.