Strictly Business on KSVY
What we will talk about: 1) First transitions - when the executives at companies like Connecticut General or General Foods decided to pack up their urban offices - what was the defining financial or cultural trigger point? 2) Did abandoned cities try to fight to retain their corporate citizens - how and why did they fail? 3) A landscape architect’s dream: what was the cost of these landscapes, role of architects and landscape architects in the business of creating them - free rein to create an ‘environment’ with minimal cost constraints? 4) From General Foods and Connecticut General - how did the concept of pastoral capitalist landscape morph over time? 5) Did corporate managements envision more stable communities, rising real estate values, auto-friendly environs - or were those a byproduct? 6) Social, racial costs of suburban corporate development? 7) Did productivity increase (sales, margins, profitability)? 8) Did these new environments enhance corporate power? How? 9) How attentive were/are corporations to the environments they paid to have created? 10) Over time - have the ‘components’ of corporate campuses, corporate estates or office parks changed? Different priorities? 11) How were employees’ needs considered in creating suburban corporate landscapes? 12) Over time - have ‘features’ of corporate landscapes, which employees care about most, changed (perceived benefits)? 13) Silicon Valley seems to have remained more viable and visible than Rt. 128 or Research Triangle- why? Ability to attract talented producers? Capital access? Fluid labor pool? A as 14) Do talented technology producers care where they’re located? 15) Today - an operating problem or a tax problem (Tesla and Chevron to TX, Starbucks, AMZN, In-n-Out Burger to TN? 16) Corporate moves to suburbs = boon to communities in which new jobs are created (healthier tax base) - role of public investment in places like Silicon Valley or Research Triangle? 17) Effect of COVID ‘work-from-home’ period on management thinking about employee ‘location and productivity’? 18) Were Downing and Olmsted correct: picturesque or pastoral landscape = ‘instrument of social order’? 19) Impact of ‘greenness’ = goodness, ‘capitalist magic’? 20) Contrarian opportunity - is the urban melting pot now a spatial condition for creative business environments? 21) Your perspective on your book after 15 years? 22) Your perspective on the future of corporate landscapes - what more (or less) is required? Where might these landscapes be developed? Guest URL: https://ced.berkeley.edu/people/louise-mozingo
122 episodios
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