Contents
- Hey! Welcome Back -
- Video: Walk the Line
- CoStar News: A Fine Line
- Time Magazine: The End of The Office
- This Weekâs Shareable
A wild city design that reimagines daily living, an architectural challenge to remote work, and a CEO who declares that the office is dead - this week on Out of Office.
đą Video: An eco-friendly walkable city design
đŚ CoStar News: Empty Los Angeles offices
đ Time Magazine: The end of the office is her
Hey! Welcome Back -
Itâs episode 9 of Out of Office, glad to have you with us.
Today I explore a new city design that was created to solve unsustainable transportation issues. Then, I look at office block developments and why theyâre not finding new tenants. Is remote work the culprit?
Stay tuned as we get to the bottom of how remote life is reshaping our working world this week.
Letâs get moving -
Video: Walk the Line
The top story this week is the Saudi Arabian city that is set to be built using the latest modern research and technology.
According to the creators at Neom, itâs time to rethink what we know about how people live, work and play.
They say the city is going to be 170 kilometers long, taller than the Empire State building and will house about 9 million people.
Dubbed âThe Lineâ because of its shape, this 3 dimensional city was conceived as a walkers paradise. The designers say you can get anywhere on foot within 20 minutes, no matter where you are inside.
đ And no cars means zero car emissions.
Check out the full promo video for the city here.
I suggest you watch it, then linger over the comments. Theyâre hilarious!

I canât say for sure whether this is a snapshot of our dystopian future, or a smart publicity stunt that will never be brought to life.
Either way, itâs pretty cool.
What I can say is that itâs interesting how people donât do new cities anymore. Things would be so different if we had to design them from scratch, on a foundation of the latest modern knowledge.
CoStar News: A Fine Line
Another fun story hitting the headlines recently, involves less of an architectural wonder and more of an architectural blunder - this time in Los Angeles, California.
The Wrapper Building as they are calling it, stands as a rebuttal to remote work - and has everyone wondering why.
đď¸ Who is building office blocks in 2022?
The answer is architect Eric Owen Moss, who hopes the space makes a strong argument for returning to the office cubicle.
Jack Witthaus writes -
"Wherever you look, you see the city, you see the green, you see the skyâŚit argues for working in an environment that's so connected to the world."
The 16 story block will be ready for occupancy later this year. As it stands - two months away - no-one has applied for tenancy there.
That's 180,000 square feet of emptiness. Maybe vistas arenât what people really want in a workspace?
Thereâs not such a fine line between the new normal at home, and the same old workplace. Building more of what no-one wants anymore is either bold, or a very out of touch move.
Time Magazine: The End of The Office
As youâve seen there are futuristic cities that solve peopleâs problems going up, and there are old fashioned office buildings nobody wants going up.
There are lessons to be learned here and questions to be asked!
Like how exactly are cities going to evolve in the future?
đ˘ Drawing a Line in the Sand: Old Vs New
One CEO who is speaking out is Brian Chesky, from Airbnb. Originally a designer, this perfectly positions Chesky as someone with unique insights.
Belinda Luscombe quotes him here -
âI think that the office as we know it, is over. Itâs kind of like an anachronistic form. Itâs from a pre-digital age. If the office didnât exist, I like to ask, would we invent it?â
So what happens now?
- The future is a true hybrid model but not the 3 day model of today
- The 3 day hybrid model is unsustainable
- All workplaces will be flexible about location
- Gatherings will be intentional, for a week or two at a time
Even then, there are risks.
âTechnology is like gravity. It wants to find the fastest point between point A and point B. If weâre not careful in the name of efficiency, we will try to remove all human connection.â
Chesky believes that being intentional is key.
Progress doesnât have to lead to a bleak future with poor connections.
Itâs possible to design meaningful ways for people to come together and experience connection and community.
We just donât know what it looks like yet. There is a lot to iron out and a lot of solutions still to be found.
Brian talked about one idea I loved -
đď¸ Neighborhood Working Spaces: Along These Lines
Imagine if there were neighborhood working spaces.
Not private subscription models - something like a pay per use model.
If everyone works remotely in the future, some of those people will prefer to go to work in a traditional sense, close to home. You donât have to have a home office - you can work at a neighborhood work space.
Get all the water cooler chats you like there, with your actual neighbors. You would get to know your community despite working for different companies.
Youâll see these people every day, and will know their kidâs names.
These professional locations will pop up in all neighborhoods. Theyâll be great for socializing, getting work done away from home, and leaving the house with almost no commute.
This isnât bleak or connectionless at all - itâs just new.
Saudi Arabia is onto something here, it just requires a fresh line of thinking đ
Thatâs all for this week - and remember the future of work is Out of Office.
Andrew
This Weekâs Shareable
- Brian Chesky, CEO of Airbnb says, âTechnology is like gravity. It wants to find the fastest point between point A and point B. If weâre not careful in the name of efficiency, we will try to remove all human connection.â We explore new city designs and empty office blocks on OOO this week.