Manhattan’s Offices Are Empty. Tokyo Is Adding New Space.

Offices in many of the world’s major cities are struggling to find workers to occupy them. The trend of remote working, triggered by the pandemic, is costing Manhattan “$12 billion a year,” “devastating America’s cities” and “killing London.”

In the world’s biggest metropolis, however, not only are employees back, developers are doubling down on the office. In 2023, Tokyo will add some 1.26 million square meters (13 million square feet) of new office space, with little trouble occupying it. Vacancy rates hover around 6%, primarily in older stock. Foreign investors, some of whom are dumping properties overseas, are snapping up buildings.

It’s quite a contrast from a year ago. As the borders reopened last October, some wondered if a still-masked Tokyo might never return to pre-Covid normality. Almost 12 months on, though the city’s recovery from the pandemic has been more circuitous, it may be more complete than global peers.

Workers are populating offices: Tokyoites have the second-highest attendance rate of 21 countries surveyed by CBRE Group Inc. The average number of people in the Otemachi business district, for example, is back to more than 90% of 2019 levels during office hours, Nikkei reports. This week, the Partnership for New York City, a business interest group, said just 58% of office workers in Manhattan have returned to the workplace, with that figure only expected to grow to 59% “on a long-term basis.”

Fewer Empty Offices in Tokyo