KPMG has opened a new 450,000 sq. ft office in Manhattan to promote in-person work.
Employee input guided the design.
CEO Tim Walsh said the new office is a “strong recommitment” to the firm’s presence in New York.
Across KPMG’s offices nationwide, employees say they prefer round tables.
So with that feedback and more in mind, the Big Four consulting firm designed and opened a new, 450,000-square-foot office at Two Manhattan West in Manhattan’s Hudson Yards neighborhood.
The firm hopes the gleaming new headquarters will not only reassert its presence in New York City but also tempt its more than 5,000 employees in New York back to the office more often.
Few things have tested corporate America’s resolve quite like the whiplash between the work-from-home movement and the subsequent return-to-office push.
Over the past few years, many companies have attempted to lure — or force — employees back to the workplace with everything from new perks to stringent mandates.
At KPMG, employees typically split their weeks between the office, client sites, and home. Last month, 81% of New York-based partners and employees worked in person about 2 days a week, the firm said.
Tim Walsh, who stepped into the role of KPMG’s CEO and chair in July, told Business Insider that the new headquarters signifies the firm’s commitment to strengthening its presence in the city.
“We’ve always been committed to New York,” Walsh told me at the firm’s new office when I visited. “This is certainly a strong recommitment on behalf of KPMG in terms of how important this market is for our firm.”
“It’s certainly brand elevating, in my opinion,” he added.
It’s all about New York
I visited the office on a rainy morning in October.
Soon after I arrived, I met Vanessa Scaglione, KPMG’s head of real estate services — one of hundreds involved in designing the new office — who took me on a tour of the space.
The 12 floors of the office are divided into four blocks of three, each themed after a different New York neighborhood — Upper Manhattan, Midtown, Downtown, and the Financial District. Throughout the office, decorative touches — from neighborhood murals to the perforated steel ceiling in the lobby, designed to evoke Park Avenue radiator covers — pay homage to an earlier era of New York, when the firm was first established as Marwick, Mitchell & Company in 1897.
The office, which officially opened on November 5, was more than five years in the making. It was designed in partnership with design firm HOK, along with several other vendors. KPMG did not disclose financial details about the total cost of the new office.