Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "More About Emily Badger"


2 mentions found


There is a thing that happens in cities — that we think happens in cities — when people with lots of different ideas bump into each other on the sidewalk, or at the bar or the grocery store or the gym. The urbanist icon Jane Jacobs identified these collisions as central to what makes cities dynamic. “The chance encounters facilitated by cities,” the economist Edward Glaeser has written, “are the stuff of human progress.”Remote work has, well, blurred this picture. How do workers spill their knowledge when they’ve moved to Montana, or the exurbs? “It’s a trying time, certainly, for my view of the world,” said Enrico Moretti, a Berkeley economist who has written extensively about why it’s good for workers, companies and the economy when people cluster in particular cities.
Persons: Jane Jacobs, , Edward Glaeser, they’ve, , Enrico Moretti Locations: , Montana, Berkeley
Downtown San Francisco’s office buildings have been quieted by some of the highest vacancy rates and slowest return-to-office trends in the country. Around nearly every corner, they’re seeking someone to lease 822 square feet of former coffee shop, or 5,446 square feet of empty bakery, or 12,632 square feet of what was once a Walgreens. Like much of the office space above it, the ground floor will probably have to be reimagined in San Francisco’s business district and other downtowns that have long taken for granted a captive audience of commuting consumers. Because who wants to return downtown when its most visible spaces have been darkened, boarded up and papered over? “And only one step above that are these sad stickers with happy smiling people on them.”
Persons: , Conrad Kickert Organizations: Downtown, Verizon, Walgreens, University, Buffalo Locations: Francisco’s
Total: 2