A platform for research: civil engineering, architecture and urbanism
Can we save the downtown? Examining pandemic recovery trajectories across 62 North American cities
Abstract As cities emerge from the COVID-19 pandemic, the persistence of pandemic-era habits such as remote and hybrid work remained ingrained in urban activity patterns, presenting a threat to North American downtown districts as we know them. This paper examines the visitation trajectories of downtowns in 62 of the largest US and Canadian cities between 2020 and 2022 using location-based services data from mobile phones. Our analysis shows that downtowns with high concentrations of professional services, information, and finance fields, high density, long commute times, and colder winter temperatures continually struggle to maintain both raw visitation numbers and overall visitation proportions throughout the analysis period. In contrast, downtowns with higher concentrations of industries like healthcare, education, arts & entertainment, and public administration recovered well, and in some cases exceeded their pre-pandemic visitation performance. We also found that the length of COVID-19 restrictions and pre-pandemic amount or characteristics of housing had lesser correlations with overall downtown recovery trajectories, suggesting the economic structure and environment had greater influence. We hope this analysis can inform city governments, downtown business associations, real estate developers, and communities on how to reinvent the North American downtown in order to remain the apexes of urban activity in the post-pandemic era.
Highlights After initial drops as low as 20%, 2022 activity recovery in North American Downtowns ranged from 30% to 155% of 2019 levels Persistence of remote and hybrid working presents challenges for office-focused downtowns dominated by professional fields Long commutes, high density, high public transit usage, and cold winters characterized struggling downtowns Downtowns with industry concentrations in areas such as entertainment, education, and healthcare fared better COVID-19 policy and housing show less effect on recovery, suggesting the economic structure and urban form are more important
Can we save the downtown? Examining pandemic recovery trajectories across 62 North American cities
Abstract As cities emerge from the COVID-19 pandemic, the persistence of pandemic-era habits such as remote and hybrid work remained ingrained in urban activity patterns, presenting a threat to North American downtown districts as we know them. This paper examines the visitation trajectories of downtowns in 62 of the largest US and Canadian cities between 2020 and 2022 using location-based services data from mobile phones. Our analysis shows that downtowns with high concentrations of professional services, information, and finance fields, high density, long commute times, and colder winter temperatures continually struggle to maintain both raw visitation numbers and overall visitation proportions throughout the analysis period. In contrast, downtowns with higher concentrations of industries like healthcare, education, arts & entertainment, and public administration recovered well, and in some cases exceeded their pre-pandemic visitation performance. We also found that the length of COVID-19 restrictions and pre-pandemic amount or characteristics of housing had lesser correlations with overall downtown recovery trajectories, suggesting the economic structure and environment had greater influence. We hope this analysis can inform city governments, downtown business associations, real estate developers, and communities on how to reinvent the North American downtown in order to remain the apexes of urban activity in the post-pandemic era.
Highlights After initial drops as low as 20%, 2022 activity recovery in North American Downtowns ranged from 30% to 155% of 2019 levels Persistence of remote and hybrid working presents challenges for office-focused downtowns dominated by professional fields Long commutes, high density, high public transit usage, and cold winters characterized struggling downtowns Downtowns with industry concentrations in areas such as entertainment, education, and healthcare fared better COVID-19 policy and housing show less effect on recovery, suggesting the economic structure and urban form are more important
Can we save the downtown? Examining pandemic recovery trajectories across 62 North American cities
Leong, Michael (author) / Huang, Daniel (author) / Moore, Hannah (author) / Chapple, Karen (author) / Schmahmann, Laura (author) / Wang, Joy (author) / Allavarpu, Neil (author)
Cities ; 143
2023-09-22
Article (Journal)
Electronic Resource
English
How can big cities save their downtown districts from strangling in their own congestion?
Engineering Index Backfile | 1953
Downtown Revitalization in Small Cities
British Library Online Contents | 1997
|How to rebuild cities downtown
Engineering Index Backfile | 1955
Downtown, Inc.: How America Rebuilds Cities
Online Contents | 1993
|Downtown, Inc. : how America rebuilds cities
TIBKAT | 1989
|