Published as the City Journal column in July’s Memphis magazine:
Years ago, after listening to the latest idea for revitalizing downtown, former Beale Street developer John Elkington facetiously said Memphis is always chasing the latest trend, but “usually, it’s 10 years after everyone else.”
Back then, his comment was met with knowing laughter, but maybe, just maybe, Memphis is closing the gap.
ServiceMaster is the latest in a national trend in recent years of Fortune 1000 companies leaving their suburban headquarters to relocate downtown, but it is the first of its kind in Memphis. In Chicago alone, AT&T, Motorola, Sara Lee, Walgreens, United Airlines, and Archer Daniels Midland have moved. In Seattle, Expedia is spending $229 million to adapt existing buildings for its new downtown waterfront headquarters.
The locations for corporate headquarters used to be decided by where the CEO wanted to live, but more and more, these decisions are being guided by where the most desirable workers want to live — college-educated 25- to 34-year-olds. Research shows that jobs follow people; the most mobile, coveted workers are younger ones, and today they want to live in an urban environment.
Connecting The Dots
In other words, companies are simply following the talent, because these 25- to 34-year-olds have a strong preference for living within three miles of the central business district. In fact, 51 percent have this preference, compared to just 12 percent in 1990. ServiceMaster, like other companies that need to attract younger workers, is placing bets that a Downtown headquarters will be a magnet for them.
This trend in urban living is paying big dividends in other cities, and there is anecdotal evidence that Memphis is catching up. Then again, when compared to other cities, the percentage of college-educated 25- to 34-year-olds is diminished by the fact that a three-mile circle around downtown Memphis takes in thousands of acres of Arkansas fields.
More than anything, the ServiceMaster announcement moved all the talk about a Downtown renaissance from hyperbole and closer to reality. It is likely that before ServiceMaster opens downtown, the Harahan Bridge’s pedestrian walkway will be completed; the Tennessee Brewery, Chisca Hotel, and Union Station, against all odds, will be transformed, and perhaps even plans for the Pinch Historic District revitalization will be under way.
When ServiceMaster’s 1,200 workers and St. Jude Children’s Research Hospital’s 2,000 new employees come online, Downtown employment will climb 10 percent. Together, they reverse a 15-year trend that dramatically reduced the number of workers downtown as major employers moved eastward.
Plan To Action
And yet, downtown’s cupboard isn’t bare. It is home to the state’s largest creative agency at Archer Malmo; the state’s largest law firm, Baker Donelson; the state’s largest bank, First Tennessee; and downtown’s other Fortune 500 company, AutoZone.
Much of downtown’s momentum has been bicoastal — South Main’s $500 million building boom on the south and Bass Pro Shops’ 3 million visitors on the north — but ServiceMaster is a huge boost for the core, and its announcement that its headquarters will include a technology and startup center is right on message for the emerging creative district plans for the area.
Often, local government and public agencies take a laissez-faire attitude toward downtown’s major investments and marquee projects. The openings are celebrated, but then nothing is done to leverage them by connecting them and the lack of programming fails to deliver the vibrancy that characterize successful downtowns. For example, although there are millions of people visiting the outdoor wonderland at The Pyramid, with no trolleys on the tracks at its doorstep and no marketing plan aimed at them, Bass Pro customers often drive, park, shop, and leave without learning more about what to do downtown.
The Promise
Today, with so many new assets that downtown did not have only five years ago and with the promise that the next five years will be transformative, the priority should be to activate downtown to such a degree that it turns the corner once and for all, and sends the message that people and companies should get on board now or miss out on the most exciting times in its recent history.
ServiceMaster will be the third largest private employer in downtown, but the importance of its decision extends far beyond the number of jobs. Only a few months ago, there were long odds against the company staying in Memphis, and if it had chosen Atlanta or Dallas, the damage to Memphis’ civic psyche and its national brand would have been devastating.
ServiceMaster has made its decision, and now it’s up to the powers-that-be to decide to deliver the energetic, vibrant, and active downtown that ushers in that new urban era for our city.
Something absolutely must be done about the empty, crumbling 100 North Main and the Sterrick Bldg. These empty buildings along with the decrepit trolleys, empty parking lots and desolate streets apes are real urban blight and so embarrassing to have downtown. Downtown Memphis is far from vibrant and a place that we always try to avoid.
Something absolutely must be done about the empty, crumbling 100 North Main and the Sterrick Bldg. These empty buildings along with the decrepit trolleys, empty parking lots and desolate streets apes are real urban blight and so embarrassing to have downtown. Downtown Memphis is far from vibrant and a place that we always try to avoid.
“and a place that we always try to avoid.”
Meh. Just slap on your Snake Blisken costume and you’ll be fine.
We need a great deal more than Servicemaster to help out downtown Memphis.