Monday, November 16, 2020

First Came "Zombie Malls"...and Now The "Office Apocalypse"

What if they reopened the office and nobody came?

Post Apocalyptic GIFs - Get the best GIF on GIPHY

That's the opening question on 11.09.2020 from Joel Kotkin - the author of The Coming of Neo-Feudalism: A Warning to the Global Middle Class. He is the Presidential Fellow in Urban Futures at Chapman University and Executive Director for Urban Reform Institute — formerly the Center for Opportunity Urbanism. Learn more at joelkotkin.com and follow him on Twitter @joelkotkin

CORONAVIRUS & THE OFFICE APOCALYPSE

"This scenario is not as far-fetched as many believe. The office may not be dead, but its post-COVID future, particularly in big cities, may look more like a medieval-style arrangement than the buzzing, super dense science fiction vision from The Jetsons.

In the coming months, particularly after Trump likely loses the White House, there will be a massive campaign—already starting from office owners like Related—to force people back into their cubicles. Billions in real estate are at stake for the creator of New York’s Hudson Yards, which received $6 billion in city subsidies and tax breaks. Besides being a hideous monstrosity, the development now could prove itself a giant white elephant. Wall Street financiers, many of whom have invested in ultra-expensive city residential and office properties, also are desperate to get the peasants back tilling the postindustrial fields. With even the iconic Empire State Building losing money hand over fist, some landlords are so panicked that they are offering tenants free rent to lure them back. Meanwhile, in San Francisco some tech firms are canceling their leases.

COVID has been especially severe in cities due to what the demographer Wendell Cox labels “exposure density” brought on by insufficiently ventilated places like crowded housing, subways, elevators, and the office environment. The virus’s fatality rate has been between three and six times higher in dense urban areas than in the suburbs or the countryside. No surprise then that among current remote workers—who tend to be clustered in cities where a higher percentage of occupations can be done remotely—roughly 60%, notes Gallup, want to stay at home or close to home. Even fewer still are likely to want to take public transit, which has been widely linked to high infection and fatality rates in the pandemic.

Going back to pre-COVID work arrangements seems all but impossible. As the Gallup poll shows, most people now working from home want to keep it that way for the foreseeable future. . . Many companies, including banks and leading tech firms such as Facebook, Salesforce, and Twitter, are expecting a large portion of their workforce to continue to work remotely after the pandemic. The transition has been less jarring for tech companies since dispersed work is now the norm for the vast majority of startups, as a recent survey of venture capitalists shows. Stanford economist Nicholas Bloom projects that ultimately, we will see telecommuting increase from 5% of the workforce before the pandemic to something closer to 20%. . .

These current trends toward remote work and greater concern about “density exposure” and related risks of urban living contradict many of the bold predictions made over the last quarter century. We are a far cry from a decade ago when developers like Sam Zell were boldly predicting rapid densification, with many people choosing to crowd into micro-units in a process tied to widespread claims about “the end of suburbia.” This was always a gross exaggeration: Throughout the last few decades the suburbs have retained their demographic and economic predominance. As a Harvard study recently confirmed, suburbia has actually been gaining ground over the past 40 years.

Read the rest at Tablet Magazine.


 

Now....About that 42"-Inch Water STUB

A pipeline to where - was that ever an unpublished mystery?

DUH? Hard to believe city officials are using that same old play-book

"This is just an illustration.
We have no idea where the alignment is,’’
----- Jake West, Mesa’s water resources director, said
“We’re just in the beginning of an alignment study to make it as successful and economically done as possible.’’
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The West Is Trading Water for Cash. The Water Is Running Out
Desert farmers along the Colorado River are striking lucrative deals with big cities. But not everyone comes out a winner. 
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BLOGGER NOTE:
Water is the most precious commodity here in the Desert
It can be bought and sold or traded on the private equity market  - all with higher prices all the time the hotter and drier our so-called 'stable environment' gets.
 
The Most Precious Commodity
Here in The Desert
 
 More than 5 years ago, this LAND DEAL was one of the largest in Mesa's history.
We didn't know more about it then.
Mesa Seals $135 Million Land Deal
"According to Natalie Lewis, assistant to city manager Chris Brady, and also lead negotiator on the deal, Mesa purchased the land in 1985 for more than $29 million for its water rights to create a water farm.----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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City envisions a $66M pipe as a lifeline to SE Mesa             

29 January 2020

Saint Holdings LLC. No Longer A Low-Profile


Jackob Andersen, Saint’s president and CEO, personally involved in bringing big economic development projects to the State of Arizona and Pinal County, by arranging land deals and acquiring rights-to-water, apparently likes the spotlight. All those BIG LAND DEALS have not gone un-noticed - or publicized - including getting put into the spotlight by your MesaZona blogger.
"We are one of the largest land owners and developers in the state of Arizona,”
---- Rose Law Group Reporter 17 May 2019
That's the outcome for the power-wielding influence from the Saints' control in the established intersection of Finance, Religion and Politics
Its holdings include:
  • Heritage Arizona: an 11,438-acre development in Coolidge slated for many land uses including commercial, residential and renewable energy developments.
  • Saint has also developed the 2,700 acre Inland Port Arizona. The Inland Port has direct railroad access and is modeled after Union Pacific’s hub in Salt Lake City. The Inland port is  home to the planned Nikola plant which landed there after originally looking to locate in Buckeye.
  • Central Arizona Commerce Park: a nearly 700-acre industrial park with shovel-ready parcels. The Casa Grande development is in an Opportunity Zone offering tax breaks for real estate and business investments. The project Is directly served by Union Pacific railroad. Lucid Motors and Tractor Supply Co. have located at the Casa Grande park.
  • The latter involves 360 job at a regional center.
  • Andersen said that deal was born in Nashville when he was at their headquarters to finalize contracts or agricultural products and ended up meeting with TSC executives about a western expansion

Here's a post farther down on September 5, 2019 from Saints Holdings on Twitter if readers of this blog are curious what the Saint's holding companies are planning to create between Phoenix and Tucson around Casa Grande and Coolidge and Florence >  a new "inland port", much similar to the same thing in-the-works in Utah. . . it certainly looks likes they are tending to now privatize water-rights just when a federal Drought Emergency Contingency Plan has been activated, When big deals like the sale of 'obsolete water-rights' on thousands of acres that would be just dirt without it, there's always scandals that surface somehow taking a cue from an earlier extract:

Arizona Corporation Commission’s desire for consolidation of the highly-fragmented water utility industry in Arizona and their new policy guidelines that support and incent such consolidation, the stage is well set for additional acquisitions,”
SAINTS HOLDINGS LLC

Website: Saint Holdings  
Twitter: @SaintHoldings       
Saint Holdings is a multi-faceted real estate investment and development company with holdings in industrial, land, multifamily residential, and agriculture.

Scottsdale, AZ        
"Global Water Resources has signed agreements with Saint Holdings that will result in providing water services to Saint Holding’s Inland Port Arizona, where is constructing their new facility."
Contact us for shovel-ready opportunities