Skip to Content
Streetsblog New York City home
Streetsblog New York City home
Log In
Development

Real Estate Giant: Suburban Office Parks Increasingly Obsolete

What tenants want in an office building is changing, and the old model of the isolated suburban office park is going the way of the fax machine. That's according to a new report from Newmark, Grubb, Knight and Frank [PDF], one of the largest commercial real estate firms in the world.

Suburban office parks are losing their luster, industry analysts say. Photo: Wikipedia
Suburban office parks are losing their luster, industry analysts say. Photo: Wikipedia
false

The old-school office park does "not offer the experience most of today's tenants are seeking," according to NGKF. As a result, the suburban office market is confronting "obsolescence" on a "massive scale." More than 1,150 U.S. office properties -- or 95 million square feet -- may no longer pencil out, the authors estimate, though a number of those can be salvaged with some changes.

"Walkability and activated environments are at the top of many tenants' list of must haves," the report states. Office parks in isolated pockets without a mix of uses around them must have "in-building amenities" --including a conference center, a fitness center, and food service -- to remain competitive, according to NGKF: "If tenants are not going to be able to walk to nearby retail or a nearby office property to get lunch, they had better be able to get it at their own building."

The study took a close look at suburban office submarkets in and around Denver, Washington, San Francisco, Chicago, and New York. In the "southeast suburban" Denver office district, for example, office buildings within a quarter-mile of the new light rail line had a 1.7 percent vacancy rate. For those outside a quarter-mile, vacancy rates were nine percentage points higher.

NGKF's findings don't mean that office tenant preferences are in perfect alignment with walkability, however.

Parking was also important to the marketability of buildings in suburban Denver. The report notes that a lot of older management personnel prefer to drive, while younger workers want transit access. So buildings that offered both were in the highest demand.

Stay in touch

Sign up for our free newsletter

More from Streetsblog New York City

Gov. Hochul’s Uber-Backed Car Insurance ‘Reforms’ Threaten Payouts To Crash Victims

Hochul wants to limit payouts to crash victims under the guise of "affordability" and bogus claims about "staged crashes."

January 14, 2026

Cyclist Badly Injured By Truck Driver at Busy Midtown Corner

The victim may have lost her leg, one witness said.

West Siders: Better Bike Lanes, Not Bans, Will Make Central Park Safer

Central Park needs protected bike lanes at its perimeter and on its transverses to keep non-recreational users out.

January 14, 2026

Not So Fast: Advocates Aren’t Sold on Gov. Hochul’s AV Push

"There is no evidence that autonomous vehicles help us achieve our goals to make our state or city’s streets more people-centered," one group said.

January 14, 2026

Wednesday’s Headlines: Hochul Has Her Say Edition

The "State of the State" is Mamdani — but Hochul is still the governor. Plus more news.

January 14, 2026

Opinion: Stop Asking If People Want to Ride Bikes

"We shouldn’t be aiming to nudge a few percentage points in public opinion. Our goal should be to make freedom of mobility so compelling that people demand it."

January 14, 2026
See all posts