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bkjelden | 3 years ago
Every office space construction project right now is either paused or being driven forward by the sunk cost fallacy.
bkjelden | 3 years ago
Every office space construction project right now is either paused or being driven forward by the sunk cost fallacy.
davidkuennen|3 years ago
paxys|3 years ago
htag|3 years ago
I do doubt there are many available locations for 25,000 workers in Arlington. This is an indicator that Amazon is unsure about the amount of office space it will need near the capitol, not that they think they can get a better deal with a pre-existing building. Maybe it doubts that it will need as many workers as previously thought. Maybe it questions if they need as much space for the same number of workers. Maybe it is second guessing the value of condensing workers in large hubs.
My guess is that they recently lowered their internal projections for the size of future federal government contracts. Pubic sentiment has lowered since '18, and politicians might be more sensitive to awarding them contracts.
reaperducer|3 years ago
Easy to imagine, since it's been in every newspaper almost every single day for the last two years. Last i checked, SFO had something like 30% office occupancy rate.
Where i live, landlords are paying the few remaining tenants in some skyscrapers to move into other skyscrapers to concentrate the remaining offices in fewer buildings so that the other towers can be shut down and mothballed, or turned into apartments.
fraud|3 years ago