| Projecting Suburban Office Space Demand:
Alternative Estimates of Employment in Offices Author: Marie Howland and David S. Wessel
Start Page: 369
End Page: 390
Volume: 9
Issue Number: 3
Year: 1994
Publication: Journal of Real Estate Research
Abstract: The boom-bust cycle of
the 1980s highlights the need for independent, public sector estimates of office space
needs. Buildings that fail to yield full property tax revenues, stand vacant and
discourage development in the surrounding environment, displace jobs without creating new
ones, and merely succeed in luring tenants from older buildings, have become commonplace
in the real estate bust of the late 1980s and early 1990s. The purpose of this paper is to
estimate office space demand and show patterns of office space usage in a suburban county.
Specifically, we estimate the share of employees in freestanding offices, by empirically
observing the share of industry employment in offices in 1986. We then assess the accuracy
of our values and compare our results with an alternative, occupational approach. The data
is drawn from Prince George's County, Maryland, a suburban county of Washington, D.C. To
briefly summarize findings, our empirically based, industry-specific approach indicates
there is a changing and wide variation in the share of employment in freestanding office
buildings across the two-digit service industries. However, when data are aggregated
across all service industries, our results generate estimates of office employment
comparable to the earlier occupational approach of Kimball and Bloomberg (1987). Both
approaches produce office space demand projections within 9% to 12% of actual leased
space.
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