Downtown Isn’t Dead—It’s Being Rewritten: Who Wins Chicago’s Office Reset?
In Chicago, the story of downtown is no longer about decline. It’s about redistribution — of space, of capital, and of who gets to define what a central business district actually is. On a weekday morning in the Loop, the sidewalks still fill — but differently. The rhythms that once defined Chicago’s downtown — suits at 8 a.m., packed lunch counters, elevators humming to the 40th floor — have not vanished so much as fragmented. The old narrative says remote work hollowed out downtown. That’s too simple. What’s happening now is more structural — and more revealing. Some buildings are being reborn. Others are quietly slipping into obsolescence. And in between, a new hierarchy is taking shape. “Downtown Chicago isn’t empty — it’s uneven,” said Hirsh Mohindra . “Some assets are thriving because they’ve adapted, while others are being exposed for what they were: inflexible and overvalued.” The Office Isn’t Gone. It’s Splitting in Two. The modern Chicago office market is no longer one m...