Three years since the pandemic began, the centres of our big cities are still struggling to find a new identity and business model amid the boom in working from home.
abc.net.au/news/cbd-23-what-the-heart-of-our-nation-s-cities-can-expect-three-ye/101748910COVID-19 has smashed and changed the nation's central business districts, but in her laneway gallery there's nowhere else Sonja Ari would rather be.More people are working from home a few days a week"I told my partner, 'We've got to go out'," she says. "We've got to be out there and we've got to get people to see us.
Life has not been easy in the central business districts of our biggest cities, almost three years since the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic. But Zelman Ainsworth of AP Property is upbeat about the prospects for CBD retail nationwide, as he connects landlords with tenants looking for a city."Everything happens here. And starts here. And grows here."
"But at the same time, you're seeing property prices sell at same values and even better values, so we're not seeing much drop in much of the retail rents in the city."The picture becomes more complex when you understand that working from home isn't a trend that's going away.
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