What are the implications of remote work for the future of downtown Indianapolis? In a working paper, our Ball State University colleagues, Mike Hicks, Emily Wornell, and Amanda Weinstein of the University of Akron, write that the percentage of employees working from home dropped from its COVID high of 35.4% in May 2020 to 7.7% in April 2022. The 7.7% of employees working from home in April 2022 is higher than the 5.6% that worked from home before the pandemic. They conclude an emerging body of academic literature suggests there will continue to be higher rates of remote work. They also note that remote workers are usually younger, more educated, and live in higher-earning households. 

Is this a death-knell for Downtowns? Not so much say Richard Florida, from the University of Toronto.   Before COVID downtowns “were gradually evolving from the one-dimensional, work-only central business districts.” COVID simply “accelerated the trend.” Tells us that between 2010 and 2016, college graduates ages 25 to 34 caused more than half the growth in neighborhoods near urban cores. He also noted that remote workers comprise a surprisingly large part of the population in urban centers. To gauge the downtowns’ recovery from the pandemic, Florida’s University of Toronto colleagues report cellphone usage from downtown locations in 62 cities. Unfortunately, Indianapolis’s downtown cellphone usage is 59th out of 62, at only 38% of its pre-COVID cellphone activity as of fall 2022. 

Workers’ greater freedom to choose where to work suggests that downtown Indianapolis’s future depends on its ability to attract people as a place to live more than a place to work. Recent data from an Indy Downtown booster organization indicates that downtown Indy is home to 25,000+ residents, with 60% of workers having associate degrees or higher. Many of these workers may engage in remote work or soon switch to remote work.  

The shift from commercial to residential real estate seems underway in downtown Indianapolis. For example, downtown Indianapolis commercial occupancy rates decreased from 86% in 2019 to 81.9% in 2021, while residential occupancy rates increased from 92.1% in 2019 to 96.9% in 2021 

For 200 years, Indianapolis has adapted and innovated, from once rivaling Detroit for car manufacturing to being the first major city to distribute sliced bread. Indianapolis must continue to adapt. People and businesses are looking for safe, clean, attractive places with great amenities and reasonable prices. Downtown Indy can certainly provide such a place.