![]() Then, Mark speaks with Gensler Atlanta Co-Managing Director Kevin Songer, Gensler Charlotte Design Manager Brad Brogdon, and Gensler Tampa Workplace Practice Area Leader Leith Oatman to discuss how the findings from our research have implications on workplace, mobility, retail, culture, and entertainment for rising cities in the Southeast and beyond. In this Gensler Design Exchange podcast episode, Cities + Urban Design Practice Area Leader for Gensler’s Southeast region Mark Erdly speaks with Gensler’s Global Cities Lead Sofia Song to discuss findings from the Gensler Research Institute’s City Pulse Surveys. ![]() Gensler’s urban design experts are already using these data-driven insights to inform how we might reimagine cities and spaces to meet new needs, offer equitable experiences, and promote sustainable urban revitalization. The Gensler Research Institute’s City Pulse Survey findings can guide design solutions that address new lifestyle and work behaviors, unfolding migration patterns, and evolving expectations of city dwellers. So what do these new lifestyle and work behaviors mean for the future of cities?Īs people’s relationships with their cities shift, we believe it’s critical that developers, urban designers, and clients shape planning strategies and key reentry decisions based on valuable research data and analyzed trends. Rising cities like Austin, Charlotte, Denver, and Raleigh, are now booming as people who are no longer tethered to downtown offices or are seeking more value and space look to relocate from global cities to more affordable, less dense cities that still offer culture and diversity of a larger global hub, but at a smaller scale. The COVID-19 pandemic accelerated trends we were already seeing shift the landscape of our cities.
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