God it's depressing that people believe this is the true nature of downtowns:

"Without commuting office workers, the office buildings go empty, they become worth a fraction of their cost, and retail cannot survive."

From https://innovationnation.blog/p/its-companies-fault-we-dont-want

Cities predate commutes. The hollowed out core that triples in population, swelled to bursting with bored and unhappy suburbanites during work hours, is a modern abomination made possible by cars and structural racism.

What's killing downtowns is that we spent so long on this awful vision of work and spent half a century strangling inner city infrastructure to subsidize incredibly expensive suburban lifestyles.

Want to make downtowns viable again? Convert dead office space to apartments and schools and colleges and other spaces people can work *and* live in.

Good luck with your rezoning applications though.

It's Companies' Fault we don't want to Return to the Office

It wasn't appealing to begin with

Innovation Nation
@megmac @BruceMirken San Francisco (where I lived for 21 years) is going to be going through a lot of painful adjustments to the new reality of work life. I don’t think that the City’s leadership has *any* vision for how to deal with this other than begging employers to make their employees return to the office — and it’s not gonna happen. The Financial District is never going to be as it was before.
@StanWonn @megmac No doubt. It needs a new vision, not "Let's go back to 2019."
@BruceMirken @megmac Yeah, Breed’s pleading for mass-scale RTO is kind of like how West Virginia still seems to be hoping for a return to the “glory days” of coal mining.