View Single Post
  #19805  
Old Posted Jul 31, 2013, 12:22 AM
wierdaaron's Avatar
wierdaaron wierdaaron is offline
Registered User
 
Join Date: Nov 2012
Location: Chicago
Posts: 2,011
Quote:
Originally Posted by Hayward View Post
Indeed. The floorplans of 360 N. Michigan were wonky and hard to accommodate larger companies that would want to plug them with a ton of systems furniture. They were okay if you wanted to do some fancy boutique office with a lot of conferencing and custom odds and ends seating. But expect to pay a high price per square foot per employee. Alot of the Class C buildings work perfectly for doctors or small offices and there is plenty of space still available. You can still find a lot of older buildings with empty space, but less of them containing law firms, small non-profits, design firms, etc. I think these are the types of firms that have upgraded to Class A space.
A tech company I've worked with just spent a few million dollars building out a shiny new office in 360 N, moving from the Monadnock, a couple of years ago. I feel bad for them now. Are they going to have to move out?
Reply With Quote