office toronto

Toronto companies are finally starting to plan employees' return to the office

Though many feared (or hoped) that the work-from-home trend prompted by the pandemicwould become a permanent way of life, many companies in Toronto are planning a return to the office as things open up.

With Ontario's vaccination rates continuing to hitimpressive thresholdsand the province nowin Step 3of itsreopening framework, things are finally feeling nearly the way they did pre-COVID, with the resumption of most business operations and the return of things likelarge-scale eventsandrestriction-free travel.

As such, CEOs are taking over office spaces theygave up earlier in the health crisis, many of themeyeing a hybrid modelthat will see employees physically turning up to work most, or at least part of the time.

A new reportfrom the Toronto-based commercial real estate providerAvison Youngshows that for the first time in more than a year, a glut of office space freed up and put on the sublet market due to COVID-19 is decreasing as brands take them over once more.

Though overall office vacancies in the city have risen quarter-over-quarter and year-over-year — hitting 7.3 per cent overall in Q2 2021, which is 0.2 per cent higher than the rate it was during the peak of the global financial crisis — available sublet space has fallen to 3.2 million square feet or 32 per cent as a proportion available space downtown, which is less than in Q1.

There are also a slew of office complexes under construction, with nearly 4.9 million square feet due to become available across the GTA by the end of next year — projects that suggest there is investor and developer faith that workers will be returning.

Huge companies such as Sun Life, RBC, and Apple have already released how they will approach return-to-work, all of them focusing on flexibility with some in-office days.

"The conversation among occupiers and landlords is changing," the report, which predicts a recovery of the commercial real estate market, reads.

"The possibilities of a hybrid workplace have helped shift occupiers' mindset from 'will we ever return to the office?' to 'when and how?'"

Meanwhile, politicians have been urging people who were forced out of work due to lockdown to get off CERB and back to the workplace ASAP, and commercial landlords同样calling on employersto get their people into the office again.

"What I'm hearing right now around the province everywhere everyday from numerous companies: they can't get people hired. They need people, but they're at home," Premier Doug Ford, for example. said at a media briefinglast Friday.

"Folks, eventually we've got to get back to work and get things moving again.... we need to get the economy going."

这个城市的多伦多和Toronto Region Board of Tradehave even launcheda new programto help businesses and their staff transition back into the groove of things through guide books with best practices and strategies.

And, many residents have already indicated thatthey're ready to returnto an IRL work setting.

Lead photo by

@campaign_creators


Latest Videos



Latest Videos


Join the conversationLoadcomments

Latest in City

Dumpster-diving Toronto software engineer saves up to $200 a month on groceries

Here's the cheapest way to take transit to the CNE in Toronto for 2023

Toronto woman warns others about potential trafficking scam after scary encounter

Toronto residents questioning safety of TTC again after man dies weeks after station attack

Rich kid in Ontario gets his dad's BMW impounded and it was all caught on video

Everyone hates Toronto's new alcohol in parks signs

It's going to be total chaos trying to get around Toronto this weekend

Comedian Ricky Gervais hid a prize for fans somewhere in Toronto