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The Quantum City Show

Welcome to The Quantum City Pod, the show where cities meet supercomputing.Hosted by Greg Gomer and Chase Garbarino, co-founders of HqO, we explore the boldest ideas and real-world breakthroughs at the intersection of AI, urban innovation, real estate, and public policy. Cities have always been civilization’s greatest supercomputers, concentrating talent, accelerating innovation, and scaling human potential.Now, it’s time for the next leap.Each week, we break down how Quantum Cities (intelligent, experience-driven urban systems) are reshaping how we live, work, and thrive. Through expert interviews, case studies, and grounded frameworks, we uncover how smart buildings, data-driven infrastructure, and civic design can transform complexity into clarity.If you’re building, governing, investing in, or simply curious about the cities of tomorrow, you’re in the right place.The Quantum City Pod is powered by HqO and the Quantum City Initiative. Subscribe and join the mission to build a m

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    The World Builds in 7 Years What Takes the US 25 | Ep 31

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/   China just opened the largest train station on earth. 1.2 million square meters. 7 years to build. LIDAR robots working three times faster than humans. Trains doing 220mph.   Boston took 17 years to extend 4.7 miles of Green Line. New York spent $5 billion on 1.8 miles of subway tunnel. California committed $100 billion to high-speed rail and hasn't broken ground.   This isn't a money problem. It's an incentives problem. And until we're honest about that, we're not even on the field.   Meanwhile NVIDIA just posted $81.6 billion in revenue. Up 85% year over year. Data centers growing faster than the company itself. AI is paying rent now… literally. Anthropic is paying SpaceX $1.25 billion a month for compute. SpaceX just filed for the largest IPO in history with a $28.5 trillion TAM. And it's not really a rocket company. It's an infrastructure play. A real estate company. With rockets.   The most expensive event in a CRE portfolio isn't a default. It's the lease expiration nobody saw coming. And the industry still doesn't have the metrics to catch it.   In this episode:   China's Chongqing East Station and what it means for talent, cities, and who wins the next 20 years The four drivers of tenant churn that CRE keeps ignoring — and why the fix is embarrassingly simple Houston: the most underrated Quantum City in America, a $700B economy, zero zoning code, and nobody talks about it NVIDIA Q1 FY27: $81.6B in revenue, 85% growth, and why their data center business is a CRE story SpaceX's S-1: Starlink, Colossus, X.AI, and $1.25B/month from Anthropic OpenAI and Anthropic IPO race — who goes first and why it matters Blackstone and Google drop a $25B AI cloud JV to take on NVIDIA MSG hosts its first Eastern Conference Finals since 1999. Stadiums are infrastructure too. Boston Tech Week is coming. The content is great. The name is a disaster. We stand by it.   Is the US infrastructure problem about money, politics, or culture? We have a take. What's yours?   TIMESTAMPS: 00:00 Welcome Back 00:49 Biggest News Week of the Year 01:31 China's Train Station Stats Are Insane 03:26 Why America Can't Build Anymore 07:27 The Real Reason US Infrastructure Fails 12:32 Transit Is a City's Greatest Force Multiplier 13:22 The Most Expensive Event in Any CRE Portfolio 16:14 Why Landlords Always Miss the Signals 19:56 The 4 Drivers of Tenant Non-Renewal 21:35 Will AI Finally Force CRE to Change? 28:13 Houston: America's Most Underrated City 31:45 Why Nobody Talks About Houston 32:41 Houston's Culture, Food and Sports 33:41 NVIDIA Posts $81.6B — The Numbers Are Absurd 35:30 AI Is Now a Rent-Paying Tenant 36:47 How Jensen Huang Runs NVIDIA 37:52 SpaceX Files the Largest IPO in History 38:21 Anthropic Pays SpaceX $1.25B a Month 42:26 SpaceX Is Letting Retail Investors In 43:29 OpenAI vs Anthropic: Who Goes Public First 46:52 Blackstone and Google's $25B AI JV 48:01 Why Stadiums Are Infrastructure 49:19 Boston Tech Week: Great Idea, Terrible Name

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    The CRE Recovery Is Only Half True | Ep 30

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/ 120 million square feet leased in Q1 2026. Best quarter in a decade. First time since before the pandemic that volume cleared its historical average.   So why does Class B still feel like a completely different market?   AI firms are signing massive leases. Trophy assets are doing fine. The best buildings in the best markets are printing record quarters. But Class B is staring at a debt wall that doesn't care about good headlines. CMBS delinquencies are above 5%. The loans coming due in the next 18 months aren't going to refinance themselves. And the Fed just got a new chair who made it very clear he's not cutting rates to make anyone feel better.   Meanwhile Dubai just launched a $5.6 billion metro line, 100 driverless taxis, air taxis with a six year exclusivity deal, and The Boring Company is breaking ground on the loop. Their stated goal is 80% of daily destinations reachable within 20 minutes. They're not debating it. They're building it. And while we argue about everything else, they're directly connecting infrastructure to GDP output and nobody in the US seems to care.   The real story right now isn't whether CRE is recovering. It's who the recovery is actually for.   In this episode: The K-curve: trophy assets win, Class B gets a very different conversation Kevin Warsh and what a new Fed chair actually means for the debt wall Hudson Pacific beats earnings and still has a problem nobody wants to talk about CBRE, Industrious, and why flex is becoming a capability not a category Trump flies to Beijing with Tim Cook, Jensen Huang and Elon Musk. NVIDIA chips are back on the table. Blackstone drops a $1.75B data center IPO and nobody is surprised Spirit Airlines is dead. The government blocked every deal that could have saved it. Now there's a crowdfunding campaign. Dubai is building flying taxis and underground loops. We're debating everything else. Why comedians are the biggest celebrities on the planet right now. We stand by it.   Sponsored by HqO - the leading tenant experience platform for commercial real estate. TIMESTAMPS:  01:26 Kevin Warsh Confirmed as Fed Chair 03:45 CMBS Delinquencies and the CRE Debt Wall 05:43 Hudson Pacific Q1 2026 Earnings Breakdown 08:10 Office Leasing Rebound and the K-Curve 10:18 Class B Office Space: Flex or Obsolescence 15:09 How to Underwrite Flex Space in 2026 18:31 Trump China Summit and NVIDIA H200 Chips 22:44 Spirit Airlines Liquidation: What Went Wrong 24:22 Airport CRE and the Ripple Effect 26:24 AI Layoffs vs AI Leasing: Both Are Real 27:21 The Labor Market K-Curve Explained 29:15 Forward Deployed Engineers and Enterprise AI 31:56 Why CRE's Tech Debt Gap Is Now an Advantage 33:37 Blackstone's $1.75B Data Center IPO 35:46 Home-Based Data Centers and the AI Buildout 37:45 Dubai's 2026 Mobility Stack 42:04 Why US Cities Are Losing the Infrastructure Race 44:31 Why Comedians Are the Biggest Celebrities Right Now

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    Is AI Saving Commercial Real Estate? | Ep 29

      Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/ Back in February, the AI panic ripped through CRE stocks and everybody bled. CBRE, JLL, BXP, Newmark — absolutely hammered. The bear case was simple: AI was gonna “destroy” office demand, gut the brokerage business, and that was that. Q1 2026 earnings just came in. It wasn't even close.   Owen Thomas got on the BXP earnings call and said the exact opposite. AI and tech leasing in San Francisco went from 50% of demand to nearly 80% in a single year. SL Green posted a record quarter. CBRE printed $10.5 billion against a $9.5 billion expectation. Their data center business alone did $950 million in Q1, a number that was literally zero five years ago. The bull case for commercial real estate isn't a thesis anymore. It's paying the rent.   We break down why AI isn't a vertical, it's a horizontal, why innovation always clusters in cities, and why the next wave of business process automation has barely started. The CapEx flowing into compute and energy is showing up directly on brokerage income statements and the Q1 numbers suggest the runway is longer than most people think.   In this episode: BXP, SL Green, CBRE, JLL Q1 2026 earnings breakdown and what they mean for office real estate Why AI demand is driving record office leasing in San Francisco and New York The Anthropic compute bottleneck and where we are in the AI adoption cycle CBRE's $800M Industrious acquisition and the Building Operations and Experience bet paying off Data centers, power infrastructure, and why local incentive structures end NIMBY pushback Federal Reserve holds rates, Powell refuses to leave, Warsh clears Senate Banking Committee Fidelity mandates five days in office, AvalonBay and Equity Residential merger talks at $50B How young commercial real estate brokers should be using AI to advance their careers The JP Morgan Lev Fin story that broke the internet on May 1st   Drop a comment if you have a city for the Quantum City Index scorecard or a guest we should have on the show.   Sponsored by HqO - the leading tenant experience platform for commercial real estate.   TIMESTAMPS:  00:00 Intro: F29 And April Numbers Up And To The Right  01:33 Owen Thomas And BXP On AI Driving Leasing Activity  02:49 Why Innovation Still Clusters In Cities  08:03 Are We Still Early On AI Adoption  11:03 Is The CapEx Ahead Of Real Demand  14:27 Q1 Earnings: BXP, SL Green And The AI Tenant Surge  20:13 CBRE And JLL Smash Estimates: $950M In Data Centers Alone  23:44 Big Tech CapEx And Where The Money Is Going  24:56 Jamie Hodari, Industrious And The $800M Move  28:16 BOE: CBRE Unifies Operations And Experience  31:15 What's Happening With Yardi And WeWork  32:13 Power Is Still The Bottleneck. Follow The Permitting Map  34:05 The Politics Of AI Growth  36:34 Why Citizens Push Back On Data Centers  40:43 The Fed Holds And Powell Refuses To Leave  42:53 Fidelity Goes Back Five Days A Week  45:01 Equity Residential And AvalonBay In Merger Talks  46:19 Career Advice: How To Use AI To Win In Brokerage  49:45 The Wall Street Story That Went Viral  52:16 Wrap: AI Is Paying The Rent

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    10% of Office Buildings Are Killing the Entire Market | Ep 28

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/ If you've been watching office vacancy hit record highs while office leasing also hits record highs and wondering what is going on, this one's for you. Episode 28. We're back. And we have a lot to catch up on. The Microsoft-Chevron deal just told you everything you need to know about where big tech is heading. Behind the meter power, 2.5 gigawatts in West Texas, and a very clear signal that energy is the new supply chain bottleneck. The companies that figure out verticalization first are going to own the next decade. And no, this is not a bubble. The demand is real. The infrastructure just isn't there yet. JLL dropped their Q1 2026 Office Market Dynamics report and the numbers are hard to ignore. 10% of buildings are carrying 60% of national vacancy. Trophy and Class A leasing is 13% above pre-pandemic levels. 120 million square feet signed in a single quarter, the highest total since 2018. This was never a demand problem. It's a product problem. And the market is done waiting for landlords to catch up. Boston gets a full Quantum City scorecard breakdown and the grades are not pretty. A city with MIT, Harvard, and Whoop in its backyard sitting at a C overall is a problem worth talking about. Tim Cook stepping down, SL Green hitting 100% occupancy, AI companies accounting for 25% of Manhattan office leases, and one very brave guy hitting an eagle on 18 next to a 12-foot alligator. Sponsored by HqO - the leading tenant experience platform for commercial real estate.   TIMESTAMPS: 00:31 Microsoft Chevron Deal: Big Tech Meets Energy  01:43 Behind The Meter Power Explained  04:03 AI Is Breaking The Energy Grid  07:00 Big Tech Verticalizes Into Energy  09:15 Why AI Is Not The Dot Com Bubble  13:16 Real Estate Developers And The Energy Opportunity  16:01 JLL Q1 2026: The Office Experience Gap  18:06 Why Office Class Labels Are Dead  23:31 Office Leasing Rebound: What The Data Says  26:20 Commercial Real Estate Distress Is Accelerating  27:00 Boston Office Market Reality Check  28:10 Boston Quantum City Scorecard  28:51 Bad Leadership Kills Economic Momentum  30:21 Massachusetts AI Coalition vs The UAE  33:02 Can Whoop Put Boston On Its Back  35:00 Office Vacancy vs Leasing: Q1 2026 Numbers  36:48 AI Companies Now Drive Manhattan Office Leasing  38:21 Tim Cook Steps Down: Good Run Or Not  41:16 Mayor Wu, Ken Griffin And City Politics  42:09 Podcast Numbers And The Hair Update  43:37 Eagle On 18 Next To A 12-Foot Alligator  45:12 What Is Coming Next On The Quantum City Show

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    Ep 27 | The $9 Billion Bet on Vermont | How Rob Lair Is Building the Anti-Silicon Valley

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/   We've been talking about what makes a quantum city for a while now. Rob is in the middle of building one. Rob Lair, co-founder of Hula Lakeside Investments, joined us this week and the conversation took on a life of its own.    Eight years ago, Rob and his partner Russ Scully converted a vacant oven factory in Burlington, Vermont into what is now 150,000 square feet of coworking infrastructure — and layered on top of it a venture fund, a 100-investor network, and a thesis that private capital deployed by people who love their community is the most powerful force in economic development. Their portfolio grew from a combined $400 million in market cap to over $9 billion. One of their companies, Beta Technologies, just IPO'd at $7.5 billion. Their founder was Rob's neighbor.   The thread that ran through the entire conversation was leadership — specifically, the idea that GDP growth and business formation don't come from government or institutions. They come from private capital with a long time horizon and a genuine connection to place. Everything else, including housing, childcare, the zoning reform, follows from that.   In this episode: The Hula model: How bricks-and-mortar infrastructure that cash-flows at a 7% cap, combined with a community investment arm, produces something WeWork never figured out Place-based investing as a real edge: Why knowing your founders as neighbors — not as deal flow — is a structural advantage no coastal fund can replicate Why housing has to come first: Hula is breaking ground on 1,400 residential units in July because economic development without housing is, in Rob's words, a waste of time The CRE opportunity in tier 2 cities: Rob's practical framework for how a developer should be mapping capital formation and startup momentum as forward demand signals — not looking at comp supply Venture math and the right time horizon: Why failure is part of the economic development, why the PayPal Mafia effect is the whole point, and why a 10-year minimum clock is non-negotiable Appraisals are two decades behind: Banks are underwriting major projects with backwards-looking market studies while the data to do it properly already exists. Rob makes the case for what this should look like in an AI era State of venture in 2025: The post-pandemic recovery, IPO windows opening and closing, and why Rob won't accept that place-based investing means lower returns The next cities to watch: Portland, Maine is Rob's top pick. Boulder, Colorado is second. And none of this, he argues, is a zero-sum game with the tier one markets   Rob, thank you for joining us. This was one of those conversations we'll be thinking about for a while. TIMESTAMPS: 01:19 Rob’s Origin Story 04:19 Building Hula’s Engine 07:36 Can Burlington Scale 13:37 What Cities Need 17:02 Winning Over Government 19:23 Venture Time Horizons 28:15 Place Based Capital 30:59 CRE Future Challenge 32:04 Capital Flows Forecasting 33:15 Hula Model Spreading 34:22 Placemaking Beats Backward Data 36:22 AI Underwriting Heatmaps 39:31 Designing For Company Lifecycle 42:32 State Of Venture Today 47:43 Alts And Capital Allocation 49:56 Smart City Data Vision 54:12 Rapid Fire City Metrics 56:14 AI Prompting Workflow Sponsored by HqO — the leading tenant experience platform for commercial real estate.

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    Ep 26 | Why Data Centers Are Moving Downtown - And What That Means for Every City in America with Daniel English of Legacy Investing

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here:⁠ ⁠⁠https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/⁠ 30% of office buildings in America are functionally obsolete. That's $1.1 trillion of commercial real estate sitting vacant, aging, and bleeding value. The question everyone is asking: what do you do with it? Daniel English has an answer. And he just bet $40 million on it. Daniel is the Co-Founder and Managing Partner of Legacy Investing and he just acquired the former Chicago Board Options Exchange headquarters at 400 S. LaSalle Street to convert it into a 33-megawatt AI data center. The building sold for $12 million 16 months earlier. He's putting hundreds of millions more in equipment in without a single tenant signed. That's not recklessness. That's a thesis. In Episode 26 of the Quantum City Initiative Show, Greg sits down with Daniel to unpack why data centers are migrating from suburban campuses to NFL cities, why the building that launched electronic trading is now being rebuilt as AI infrastructure, and why the data center industry's biggest problem isn't power or latency — it's that we've built data centers that look like prisons. There's also one idea in this episode that will reframe how you think about every building in your portfolio: data centers are not designed for people. They're designed for servers. And that distinction — something that sounds obvious — turns out to unlock an entirely new playbook for what to do with the office buildings no one else can figure out. Also in this episode: Data Centers as Civic Institutions: Every photo of your family, every iMessage, every digital memory you own lives in a data center. So why are we running political campaigns against them? The AI Inference Explosion: Daniel explains why AI inference — the compute that powers your LLMs in real time — is expected to 10x in the next five years, and why that changes where data centers need to be located The Amazon Package Analogy: The single clearest explanation of why data centers work exactly like logistics warehouses — and why that means more of them are coming to your downtown The NFL City Rule: If your city has an NFL team, you're getting data centers. The Minneapolis Proof of Concept: Legacy built an AI inference node on top of a mixed-use office tower in downtown Minneapolis — and nobody driving past it knows it's a data center The Grid Is 100 Years Old: Daniel's historical argument for why the power conversation is being misframed — and why data centers may actually be the catalyst cities need to finally upgrade aging infrastructure Data Centers in Space: Why this idea gets laughed at in every industry cocktail party Daniel attends (and why the maintenance problem is the real answer)   TIMESTAMPS 00:00 — Intro: Strata backstory, and the $1.1 trillion office problem 01:45 — Daniel's background: tech startups, going public, and the shift to infrastructure 03:35 — What is a data center? And why does everyone think they're prisons? 06:15 — The civic institution argument: your family photos live in a data center 08:05 — Data Centers Are Heading Downtown 09:55 — AI inference explained: the Amazon package analogy 13:05 — The NFL City rule: where data centers cluster and why 18:20 — Power and the grid: why the 100-year-old infrastructure argument changes everything 24:30 — Greg's snowstorm story and the moment you realize you take the grid for granted 26:40 — The CBOE building: vacant for four years, rats included, now being reinvented 30:45 — Why you can put servers in the middle of a 50,000 sq ft floor plate — and why humans won't go there 33:40 — Washington's role: zoning, policy, and why no one defined "data center" in building code until recently 38:10 — What Legacy looks for in a market 41:50 — Hottest data center markets 43:15 — Data centers in space 45:40 — Rapid Fire Segment  

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    Ep. 25 | Why AI Is Sending CRE Stocks Into Freefall (And Why That’s Wrong)

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/   When the AI panic hit Wall Street, the public markets went into an absolute whipsaw. Commercial real estate took one of its sharpest beatings in years - CBRE tumbled, JLL tumbled, and names like Newmark and BXP weren't far behind. The narrative? Investors were terrified that AI would automate the brokerage business, gut white-collar jobs, and crater office demand overnight.   There’s just one problem with that "doom and gloom" story: CBRE just posted record annual revenue of $40.6 billion - up 13% year over year.   In Episode 25 of TQCIS, we break down why this selloff might be one of the most "oversold" moments in recent history. They dive into why the Luddite Fallacy is the most underused framework in CRE right now, proving that efficiency doesn't decrease demand for labor - it usually explodes it.   We also look at the ultimate "vibe shift": Coinbase. After paying $25 million to exit San Francisco and declaring themselves "remote-first," they’re officially back with 150,000 square feet. It turns out, when innovation cycles speed up, the smartest companies realize that digital communication is not the best form for learning.   Also in this episode: The AI Clustering Effect: Why San Francisco is proving that innovation still needs a physical epicenter (and why talent is a social species). Tuesday is the New Monday: Placer.ai data shows the midweek spike is real. What does that mean for a lease built on "contractual lock-in" instead of customer success? The Elon Effect: SpaceX is poised to raise more in its IPO than 90 companies combined. We discuss why Musk is arguably the most important "city-maker" alive today. The Agentic Unlock: Greg shares how he’s using AI agents to get "brutally honest" feedback on sales pitches and account management in real time. Is the office dead? Or is the "passive landlord" the only thing actually going extinct? TIMESTAMPS 00:00 - Intro: Three feet of snow, no power, and the case against Boston as a Quantum City  02:00 - Anchor Story: The AI panic that hammered CBRE, JLL, and the CRE market  18:40 - Coinbase paid $25M to leave San Francisco. Then came back with 150,000 sq ft.  24:50 - SF's bifurcated office recovery and the AI clustering effect 29:55 - Placer.ai data: Tuesday and Wednesday are the new Monday  32:00 - What hybrid work really means for lease structures and concessions  35:10 - SpaceX IPO: poised to raise more than all of last year's IPOs combined  38:00 - Elon Musk as a city-maker  -  Austin, gigafactories, and the Mars thesis  42:20 - Techstars Boston goes on hiatus. Bedrock Detroit picks up the slack.  44:50 - Agentic AI in the real world: 3-year account expansion plans in 2 minutes Sponsored by HqO  -  the leading tenant experience platform for commercial real estate. #CommercialRealEstate #AI #CRE #OfficeMarket #SanFrancisco #Coinbase #ArtificialIntelligence #SmartCities #QuantumCity #RealEstate #PropTech #FutureOfWork

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    Ep. 24 | Real Estate Is At The Kids Table While Tech Makes Trillions with Dominic Endicott

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/   In this episode, we sit down with Dominic Endicott, author of "Knowledge Towns" and has been thinking about how secondary cities can win in a world where Silicon Valley takes everything.   One stand out point: real estate has $380 trillion in value but only $3 trillion in market cap. Meanwhile, tech went from $3T to $30T in the same period. Are we “stuck at the kids table while tech eats at the adults table” as Dominic phrased it? If so, why?   Dominic breaks down how places like Burlington, Vermont are beating major metros at their own game. They invested $200M at seed level, attracted $800M in follow-on capital, and just had their first $7B IPO - from a company that started in Boston but couldn't get funded there.   We wanted to understand how this actually works and whether it can be replicated. Turns out, it can. But American cities have to get over being "embarrassed" to want growth.   On this episode we dig into:   The "Kids Table" Problem: Why real estate can't capture value the way tech does and what the iPhone/AT&T story teaches us about platform risk Burlington's $7B Playbook: How Vermont's Hula Collective created a venture ecosystem from scratch The $10 Trillion Housing Bet: Why the real opportunity isn't AI data centers - it's building 10 million homes in secondary cities Universities Are Broke: Dominic argues most universities are "well over their skis" with $1T in deferred maintenance and “Taj Mahal” research buildings that AI just made obsolete Pittsburgh's Plan: The controversial plan to attract 500K people and $100B to a city that's "embarrassed" to want it Ban Cars, Get Babies??: The Pontevedra, Spain story that proves walkability is what people really want   This conversation challenged a lot of our assumptions about where capital should flow and what cities should optimize for. If you're interested in how venture capital, placemaking, and talent attraction can actually rebuild American cities, pick up the book “Knowledge Towns.”    Huge thanks to Dominic for coming on and sharing his vision for future cities.    ---   BEST MOMENTS: 00:00 Introduction 03:46 What is a Knowledge Town vs. Smart City? 07:25 Burlington's $7B Success Story  13:50 Why Put Philanthropy Into Venture Capital? 17:40 Universities Are Functionally Bankrupt  29:05 Amazon's $1T AI Infrastructure Play 37:20 The $10T Housing Opportunity Nobody's Talking About 44:50 Pittsburgh's Embarrassing Growth Plan 55:20 Why Real Estate Is Stuck at the Kids Table  56:50 How Apple Ate AT&T's Lunch  1:02:56 The Single Most Important Metric for Healthy Cities 1:03:15 Ban Cars, Get Babies: The Pontevedra Miracle   ---   ABOUT DOMINIC ENDICOTT: Co-author of "Knowledge Towns" Director at North Star Ventures Co-founder of 4Gen Ventures ($500M raised) Sold consulting firm for $100M Best exit: Jitterbug (sold to Best Buy for $800M)   Connect: https://www.linkedin.com/in/dominicendicott/ | Book: Knowledge Towns

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    Ep. 23 | The Transformation Economy: Why the Landlord Model is Obsolete with Joe Pine

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/ In this episode, we talk with a guest who has shaped our thinking for years: Joe Pine.    Most know him as the author of The Experience Economy, but his newer work on The Transformation Economy is what we really wanted to dig into, especially given the "global AB test" the real estate industry has been forced into lately.   We start with Joe’s "nerd" origins at IBM and how he moved from applied math to defining the Progression of Economic Value. We wanted to get past the "fluff" and talk about why the current real estate model feels so stuck in the past or as we discuss, stuck in the year 1100.   On this episode we talk about: The "Landlord" Problem: We got into why the term "landlord" literally dates back to feudalism. It’s a 1,000-year-old mindset in a world that’s moved on. We talk about why most office buildings today are just "means to an end" and how they’re failing to help tenants actually get better at what they do.   The "Matrix" Office: Joe has this wild vision for AI. Instead of just replacing jobs, he sees it as the tool that will finally let buildings "morph" to fit who you are and what you’re doing in the moment. It’s about personalization at a level that feels like science fiction.   Are You a "Racket"? This was probably the heaviest part of the talk. Joe argues that if your business is designed to addict people, you’re not a business - you’re a racket. We dig into his idea of "Human Flourishing" and why profits are just a scorecard for how much you actually help your customers.   The Transformation Chrysalis: We rethink what a city should be. It’s not just a collection of streets and shops; it should be a place where you go to become a better version of yourself.   Huge thanks to Joe for coming on the show and sharing his time with us. His perspective on why we need to move beyond simple services to focus on actual human results is exactly the push this industry needs right now. We highly recommend picking up both The Experience Economy and his newest work, The Transformation Economy, to get the full roadmap for what’s coming next. You definitely don't want to miss the shift. Timestamps: 00:31 Joe and His Background 01:09 The Experience Economy and Transformation Economy 03:37 Commercial Real Estate and the Experience Evolution 05:58 Personalization in Commercial Real Estate 17:31 AI and the Future of Customization 27:06 The Purpose of Business: Fostering Human Flourishing 29:51 The Long-Term Vision: Investing Like Amazon 31:03 AI's Role in Enhancing Human Flourishing 35:42 The Role of Cities in Human Flourishing 42:33 The Future of Commercial Real Estate 45:27 AI in Writing and Personal Development

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    Ep. 22 | Singapore as a Quantum City & How AI Is Redefining What Matters in Commercial Real Estate

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/   AI isn’t a future concept anymore. It’s the infrastructure the economy is running on, and it’s starting to show up in places that feel very real, very physical, and sometimes very uncomfortable. Cities, energy systems, offices, and the buildings we keep arguing about all seem to be getting pulled into the same conversation.   Throw in massive AI investments, data centers that need more power than entire towns, communities asking tough questions, and a workforce that’s clearly restless, and things get complicated fast. Some of this feels exciting. Some of it feels messy. And some of it probably deserved a little more thought before it showed up in our backyard.   On this episode we talk about: How AI has become the infrastructure the economy runs on and why this isn’t a short-term cycle The Stargate project and what massive AI infrastructure means for cities, energy, and local communities Data centers, power constraints, water usage, and the growing pushback against large-scale AI development Why commercial real estate sits at the center of the AI transition and can’t stay on autopilot The future of offices, burnout, and what it means when over half of the workforce is looking for change Why the physical environment still matters and how space influences behavior, productivity, and retention Quantum cities and what places like Dubai and Singapore reveal about different models of urban innovation Singapore’s Smart Nation approach, digital identity, and why trust matters more than technology Why there is no single blueprint for a quantum city and why some models don’t scale The mistakes AI leaders risk repeating from the social media era and the growing gap between tech and society Energy, infrastructure, and the question of whether big tech becomes the next generation of utilities Stay Connected: Subscribe to the newsletter for insights & event invites Share your feedback - we love hearing from you! Follow us on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/hqo/  Twitter https://x.com/hqoap Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hqoap TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@hqo_official    TIMESTAMPS: 01:08 SpaceX and Tesla News 04:40 Interest Rates and Federal Reserve Update 09:30 Stargate AI Infrastructure Project 19:10 Workplace Trends and Employee Retention 31:51 Generational Perspectives on Technology and Learning 33:21 The Rise of Quantum Cities: Dubai and Singapore 39:07 Trust and Digital Identity in Smart Cities 43:23 PropTech Trends and Investments 49:49 Pop Culture and Tech: A Lighthearted Wrap-Up

  11. 21

    Ep. 21 | How the Cities of the Future are Designed with Marwan Aboudib of Tekuma

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/   In this episode, we’re joined by Marwan Aboudib, partner at Tekuma (Tekuma Frenchman Urban Design), to talk through what it really takes to build cities for the future. Drawing from his work across global markets, Marwan shares how city-making actually happens when vision meets economics, policy, and real-world constraints.   The conversation moves past the usual smart city and quantum city hype and into the harder questions: what makes a city productive, why so many large-scale urban projects stall, and how technology fits in without becoming the main character. We explore the intersection of urban design, governance, culture, and economics, and why cities only work when these pieces are aligned.   We talk about: Marwan’s background and how growing up in Dubai shaped his perspective on cities The early days of Tekuma, the challenges of building the firm, and the moment that pushed it onto the global stage What “productive cities” really mean and why cities need to create more than they consume The real challenges of urban development. From governance and ROI to moving beyond renderings Why the future of cities is less about building from scratch and more about retrofitting what already exists Community, culture, and why many mega cities struggle to feel human Boston’s AI talent drain, Miami’s rise, and how lifestyle and branding influence where people build The role technology should play in cities and where it often goes wrong Greenland, freedom cities, and what happens when big tech ambition meets real people and real places   Huge thanks to Marwan for coming on the show and spending the time with us. His perspective, his honesty about what actually works in cities, and the way he connects people, culture, and technology made this a great conversation.  Stay Connected: Subscribe to the newsletter for insights & event invites Share your feedback - we love hearing from you! Follow us on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/hqo/  Twitter https://x.com/hqoapp Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hqoapp TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@hqo_official    TIMESTAMPS: 00:39 Marwan's Background and Career Journey 05:18 Founding Tekuma and Early Challenges 08:09 Winning the China Project and Expanding Globally 10:40 Philosophy of Productive Cities 15:44 Challenges and Opportunities in Urban Development 23:57 Retrofitting Existing Cities for the Future 29:55 The Importance of Community in Mega Cities 30:30 Boston's AI Talent Drain 30:57 Miami's Rise as a Tech Hub 33:03 The Role of Technology in City Development 34:58 The Future of Commercial Real Estate 38:31 Greenland: The Next Frontier for Tech Billionaires 40:59 The Human Element in City Planning 44:34 Quick Hits and Predictions for 2027 49:06 The Future of Cities in Pop Culture 52:47 Final Thoughts and Reflections

  12. 20

    Ep. 20 | PropTech 2026: What’s Real, What’s Hype with MIT Guest Steve Weikal

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/   In this episode, we’re joined by Steve from the MIT Center for Real Estate, and we get into a real conversation about PropTech, AI, and what’s actually real versus what’s just hype. No sci-fi, no robots delivering buildings, just how this stuff is really showing up in commercial real estate.   We talk about:   Why some of the most powerful uses of AI might be in the boring, behind-the-scenes work Whether AI is replacing jobs, creating jobs, or doing something else entirely How hard it actually is to measure productivity and ROI in real estate The global AI adoption gap and why the U.S. builds the infrastructure but others move faster Agentic AI and the real question underneath it all: Do you trust it enough to hit the button? Cities, housing, workplace shifts, and what signals actually matter going forward We go a little rogue, get a little philosophical, and finish with a lightning round that covers everything from healthy cities to personal tech we can’t live without.   Huge thanks to Steve for coming on, sharing his perspective, and helping us think more clearly about where this industry is actually headed.   Hit play. This one’s less about answers and more about asking the right questions.   Who should we bring on for the next episode?   Stay Connected: Subscribe to the newsletter for insights & event invites Share your feedback - we love hearing from you! Follow us on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/hqo/  Twitter https://x.com/hqoapp Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hqoapp TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@hqo_official  TIMESTAMPS: 05:30 Deal Path AI Studio Success 13:53 Global AI Adoption Divide 27:37 Measuring AI Impact 32:42 AI R&D Investment 40:33 Future of PropTech at MIT 43:34 Lightning Round

  13. 19

    Ep. 19 | Bull or Bear? 2026 Predictions on Office, AI, and Capital Allocation

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/   We’re back for the first episode of the year, and instead of pretending we have crystal-clear answers for 2026, we do what we do best: zoom out, look at the data, and call out what actually feels different this time.    2025 was loud, messy, and very AI-heavy, so we start there, breaking down why this so-called “AI bubble” isn’t behaving like past tech cycles. This isn’t just software hype. It’s physical infrastructure, energy, data centers, and real adoption finally showing up in the numbers.    The “office is dead” narrative continues to fall apart, just not evenly. Leasing is back in a big way in places like New York, Boston, and even San Francisco, but the gap between winners and losers has never been wider. Experiential, flexible, high-quality workplaces are pulling ahead, while everything else keeps sliding. We talk through why the old Class A, B, and C labels are starting to feel useless, and why office is quickly becoming less about square footage and more about experience.   We wrap things up by playing a little bull-or-bear across asset classes, markets, and cities, where we’re bullish, where we’re cautious, and where we’re honestly just waiting to see how things play out. Along the way, we hit data centers, housing affordability, late-stage SaaS, capital finally coming off the sidelines, and a few city calls that spark some pushback. It’s a loose but grounded start to the year, focused less on dramatic predictions and more on how AI, office, and capital are quietly lining up as the next cycle takes shape.   Stay Connected: Subscribe to the newsletter for insights & event invites Share your feedback — we love hearing from you! Follow us on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/hqo/  Twitter https://x.com/hqoapp Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hqoapp TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@hqo_official    TIMESTAMPS: 00:38 Podcast Beginnings and Achievements 01:07 Year in Review: Highlights and Predictions 01:27 Corporate Purchases of Homes: Trump's Stance 04:20 AI Industrial Bubble: 2025 Recap 09:04 Data Centers and AI Infrastructure 15:53 Commercial Real Estate: Office Market Trends 26:10 Future of Brokerage and Flex Spaces 29:10 Bull or Bear: Asset Class Predictions 30:26 Bull Case for Experiential Retail 31:43 Bearish Outlook on Single Family and Multifamily Housing 34:13 Office Market Predictions 34:29 Bullish Sentiment on Public Markets 36:07 Late Stage SaaS Comeback 40:21 City Predictions: Winners and Losers 44:17 Wild Card Predictions for 2026

  14. 18

    Ep. 18 | Why Experience Is the New Engine of Real Estate

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/   Social media bans, AI data centers, and real estate signals—what a week.   Australia’s move to ban social media for teens and why the feed is starting to look like “digital cigarettes,” plus the debate over an age “sweet spot” for social platforms.   We jump to SpaceX’s potential 2026 IPO and why liquidity matters far beyond stocks—impacting commercial real estate and infrastructure capital flows. We also go deep on AI and data centers: why Norway’s sovereign wealth fund is avoiding the asset class, how hyperscalers hold the leverage, and why the real AI bottleneck isn’t the tech—it’s energy and the power grid. Meanwhile, Brookfield is going the other way with a $20B bet on AI infrastructure.   We wrap with youth sports as a $50B+ business driving hotels and mixed-use development, plus quick hits on San Diego, Fed cuts vs the stuck 10-year, Lever House hitting 100% occupancy, Boston’s JPM branding fight, Disney + OpenAI, social cannabis in Massachusetts, and an Amsterdam detour.   In this episode: social media ban, SpaceX IPO, AI + energy, data centers, youth sports real estate, Fed rates, office recovery, Boston skyline, and more.   Stay Connected: Subscribe to the newsletter for insights & event invites Share your feedback — we love hearing from you! Follow us on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/hqo/  Twitter https://x.com/hqoapp Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hqoapp TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@hqo_official    TIMESTAMPS: 02:20 Social Media Ban for Teens in Australia 04:30 SpaceX IPO Announcement 07:27 Norway's Wealth Fund and Data Centers 11:10 Youth Sports as a Real Estate Driver 14:22 Irvine's Exit from Downtown San Diego 17:46 Fed Rate Cuts and Economic Impact 22:13 Lever House Achieves 100% Occupancy 24:11 JP Morgan's New Deal in Boston 25:03 Boston Skyline Branding Debate 27:02 Norwegian Sovereign Wealth Fund and Data Centers 28:46 Miami's Freedom Park and Experiential Real Estate 31:14 Alcohol Trends and Topgolf's Corporate Shift 32:05 SL Green's Opportunistic Debt Fund 33:09 Disney's Investment in OpenAI 39:44 Amsterdam's Canals and Social Cannabis Legislation

  15. 17

    Ep. 17 | Sam Altman’s Code Red, What JLL’s 2025 Tech Survey Reveals & Premium Malls Are Back

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/ Sam Altman has reportedly called a “code red” as the AI race accelerates—and that momentum is beginning to show up in commercial real estate. In EP17, we look at Boston’s potential budget pressure as commercial values are projected to decline, then dive into JLL’s 2025 Global Tech Survey to understand what 1,500+ CRE leaders are doing with AI.   Adoption is high—many firms are running AI pilots—but results are still limited, with only a small share reporting that they’ve achieved their AI goals. We discuss why the performance gap between tech leaders and laggards is widening, and what that could mean for NOI, operating costs, vacancy, and tenant retention.   We also explore the “Quantum City” idea: buildings as connected nodes in a living city network, followed by quick hits on Crexi’s record listings, signs of leasing improvement in San Francisco tied to AI-driven growth, and a final discussion on private equity’s growing role in youth sports and the rising cost of streaming access.   In this episode we also cover: 🏙️ Boston’s CRE hit and city budget impact 📊 JLL 2025 Tech Survey: adoption, priorities, barriers 🧪 AI pilots vs real results (the 5% problem) 📉 Tech leaders vs laggards (ROI gap) 🌐 Quantum City + buildings as network nodes ⚡ Quick hits: Crexi, SF leasing, and more 🏒 One more bit: PE in youth sports + the $300/month shock Stay Connected: Subscribe to the newsletter for insights & event invites Share your feedback — we love hearing from you! Follow us on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/hqo/  Twitter https://x.com/hqoapp Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hqoapp TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@hqo_official    TIMESTAMPS 02:30 “Code Red” (AI Race) 03:20 Boston CRE + City Budget 05:00 JLL Tech Survey Deep Dive 07:10 AI Pilots vs 5% Goals 16:10 Tech Leaders vs Laggards 18:40 Quantum City + Building Nodes 31:00 Quick Hits (Crexi + SF) 34:30 Boston Return-to-Office 39:30 Premium Malls Comeback 41:30 One More Bit (Youth Sports + PE)

  16. 16

    Ep. 16 | Austin as a Quantum City, WFH vs Office and Apple’s New Sock

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/ Michael Burry’s infamous fund has gone dark after placing a massive short bet against Nvidia and AI—mirroring his original Big Short strategy. Is he blowing up the next bubble? This week, we track the ripples across commercial real estate, where the office market recovery is strictly a trophy-asset-only affair. Using exclusive data, we reveal how offices must offer genuine autonomy and comfort to overcome the commute, while financial momentum returns with lending hitting a seven-year high. We also deep-dive into why Austin, Texas, is the nation's fastest-growing Quantum City, and cover shocking news from Barry Sternlicht on replacing asset managers with AI, plus the U.S. Mint's pricey penny problem and the controversial 50-year mortgage proposal. In this episode, we cover: 💸 The Burry Play — Michael Burry's $500M short bet against Nvidia/AI and his fund's mysterious SEC exit.  🏗 The Great Office Bifurcation — Why trophy assets are soaring, while Class A, B, and C buildings are fighting for survival.  🧠 The Autonomy Gap — Exclusive data on why employees feel more productive at home and how offices must adapt to overcome the commute.  🌆 The Quantum City of Austin — Why Texas is attracting corporate giants and what makes it the fastest-growing U.S. metro.  🤖 AI & CRE Jobs — Real estate billionaire Barry Sternlicht reveals his plan to replace analysts and asset managers with AI.  💰 Lending is Back — Commercial real estate lending momentum hits a seven-year high.  📈 The 50-Year Note — The proposed mortgage plan and its potential impact on housing affordability and interest rates.  😂 Quick Hits — The U.S. Mint stops making the penny (it cost 3 cents to produce) and Apple's $250 iPhone "sock."   Stay Connected: Subscribe to the newsletter for insights & event invites Share your feedback — we love hearing from you! Follow us on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/hqo/  Twitter https://x.com/hqoapp Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hqoapp TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@hqo_official    TIMESTAMPS: 00:22 Government and Market Updates 00:48 Michael Burry's Big Short 2.0 01:57 Office Market Trends and Analysis 12:57 Leaseman Data and Work From Home Insights 23:49 Spotlight on Austin, Texas 30:13 Momentum in Commercial Real Estate 30:32 Lending Momentum Hits a Seven-Year High 31:35 Concerns Over Labor Numbers and Inflation 32:42 Liquidity and Market Activity 33:40 REITs and Banks: A New Merger Trend 37:49 Tenant Improvement Allowances Surge 41:15 AI in Real Estate: Barry Sternlicht's Bold Move 44:21 The End of the Penny: A 238-Year Run 47:43 Trump's 50-Year Mortgage Proposal 50:07 Apple's $250 iPhone Pocket: Innovation or Gimmick? 53:06 Kim Kardashian and the Tesla Robot: The Unexpected News 53:37 Conclusion and Recap

  17. 15

    Ep. 15 | Nvidia Hits $5 Trillion! Sky Stadiums and Data Centers in Space

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/ Nvidia just became the first company in history to hit a $5 trillion valuation — bigger than Germany’s economy, 25 Disneys, or 50 Nikes (we did the math… kind of). It’s the clearest sign yet that the AI boom is reshaping everything from Wall Street to warehouse walls — and maybe blowing up a bubble big enough to reach space. In this episode, we unpack how Nvidia’s meteoric rise is rippling through the global economy and commercial real estate — from AI-powered infrastructure to speculative data center builds that might be running on “assumed demand.” Then we go orbital: Google’s new plan to beam power to data centers from space, and Saudi Arabia’s billion-dollar “Sky Stadium” floating a thousand feet above the desert. We also get into OpenAI’s trillion-dollar ambitions (and that awkward “maybe the government can cover our $1.4T chip tab” comment), Microsoft’s new office-attendance surveillance trick, and why southern cities like Atlanta and Dallas are suddenly on fire with new leases. Plus, a little Mission Impossible, a lot of free-market philosophy, some old-school espionage — and, as always, Tom Cruise still saving the world. In this episode, we cover: 💸 Nvidia’s $5T milestone — and whether we’re in the middle of an AI-fueled bubble. 🏗 The ripple effect on commercial real estate — from data centers to power grids. 📈 Speculation vs. real demand — why “assuming” growth could get risky. 🌆 The Quantum City Initiative — the five principles behind smarter, freer cities. 🤖 AI, privacy, and smart cities — from biometrics to Mission Impossible’s “Entity.” ⚖️ Free markets vs. regulation — and how “regulatory capture” keeps giants in charge. 🏙 What makes a city truly ‘smart’ — and why citizen experience is the real tech frontier. 🛰 Google’s Project SunCatcher — powering AI from outer space. 📶 Microsoft Teams’ Wi-Fi tracking — Big Brother just joined your office network. 🏢 Commercial real estate rebound — Piedmont, Highwoods, and Boston Properties beat earnings. 💰 OpenAI’s $1T IPO dream — and its $1.4T “oops” government backstop request. 🏟 Saudi Arabia’s Sky Stadium — a billion-dollar arena suspended in mid-air. 🕵️ “Sex warfare” in Silicon Valley — spies, honeypots, and why you should vet your Tinder dates. 🚗 Elon Musk’s $1T pay package — and his flying car prototype (yes, really). 🎬 Mission Impossible & Tom Cruise Watch — proof that some heroes never age. Stay Connected: Subscribe to the newsletter for insights & event invites Share your feedback — we love hearing from you! Follow us on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/hqo/  Twitter https://x.com/hqoapp Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hqoapp TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@hqo_official TIMESTAMPS: 00:14 Market Updates and Economic Insights 01:26 Nvidia's Historic Milestone 02:51 The Impact on Commercial Real Estate 09:20 Quantum City Initiative 12:55 AI and Smart Cities 21:20 Quick Hits and Future Trends 27:06 Real Estate Earnings Reports 27:14 Piedmont and Highwoods Leasing Success 28:55 Boston Properties' Strong Quarter 29:47 OpenAI's Ambitious IPO Plans 35:21 Saudi Arabia's Sky Stadium 38:40 Sex Warfare in Silicon Valley 41:25 Elon Musk's $1 Trillion Pay Package 43:34 Episode Recap and Closing Remarks

  18. 14

    Ep. 14 | PropTech 3.0: Tokenization, Last-Mile Runners, and the Comeback of Class B Buildings

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/   Blockchain is finally making its way into commercial real estate. Deloitte claims $4 trillion worth of property could be tokenized by 2035 — a bold forecast that has everyone from brokers to blockchain believers talking. Whether it’s a revolution or just another consulting daydream, it’s the biggest shift the industry’s seen in decades.   In this episode, we explore how technology, capital, and culture are reshaping the built world. From China’s skyscrapers so tall they’ve created a new job — last-mile food runners — to Boston’s $100-million One Lincoln revival with rooftop basketball and whiskey bars, the real estate market is reinventing itself floor by floor.   We also get into Meta’s AI layoffs, the U.S. government’s plan to shed 80 million square feet of office space, and why Class B buildings are suddenly cool again (as long as they’re B-plus). Plus: bedbugs at Google, Travis Kelce’s bid to rescue Six Flags, and an NBA gambling scandal that feels like a rejected Scorsese script.   In this episode, we cover: 🏢 Tokenization and the rise of PropTech 3.0. 🤖 Meta’s AI strategy — fewer researchers, bigger ambitions. 🍱 China’s “last-mile runners” and skyscraper logistics. 🏗 Boston’s One Lincoln revival and the return of Class B swagger. 💸 Capital shifts from the U.S. to Asia — and what’s driving them. 🐞 Bedbugs at Google and the messier side of RTO. 🎢 Six Flags, Travis Kelce, and the return of in-person experiences. 🏀 The NBA gambling scandal — and a few too many plot twists.   💡 Stay Connected: ✅ Subscribe to the newsletter for insights & event invites ✅ Share your feedback — we love hearing from you! ✅ Follow us on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/hqo/  Twitter https://x.com/hqoapp Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hqoapp TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@hqo_official Timestamps: 00:46 Blockchain in Commercial Real Estate 03:18 The Future of PropTech 06:04 Meta's AI Strategy 11:32 New Job Categories in Skyscrapers 14:16 Government Real Estate Overhaul 16:53 Class B Office Spaces Making a Comeback 21:33 Return to Office Challenges 23:01 Return to Office Benefits 23:16 Boston's Office Building Makeover 25:33 South Station and Surrounding Developments 27:32 KKR's Earnings and Global Capital Shift 31:15 Six Flags and the Revival of Theme Parks 36:35 NBA Gambling Scandal and Mafia Involvement

  19. 13

    Ep. 13 | STRATA Recap: Travis Kalanick, MIT, and the Future of Smart Cities

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/ STRATA is in the books — and wow, what a day. Together with our partners at MIT, we packed a room in Cambridge with some of the smartest people we’ve ever met to talk about what’s next for cities, tech, and real estate.   In this episode, we look back at what went down: Travis Kalanick shared his vision for an “operating system for the physical world,” Joe Pine reminded us why experiences matter more than ever, and we learned how innovation, design, and capital are colliding to reshape urban life.   We also got into what surprised us most — how cities can get smarter without losing their soul, and why the real change-makers might be the builders, not the algorithms.   It was a big day, full of ideas, laughs, and a few curveballs (yes, we ended up talking about OpenAI’s new adult content policy).   In this episode, we cover: 🏙 The Quantum City vision — beyond “smart,” toward human-centered growth. 💡 How MIT is reframing the built environment and economic acceleration. 🍽 Travis Kalanick’s mission to reinvent food, kitchens, and urban logistics. 🎢 Joe Pine’s “Experience Economy” — how spaces become transformative. 💰 Capital markets, blockchain, and funding the next generation of cities. 🚗 From parking to flying taxis — how mobility will reshape skylines. 🤖 Biometrics, AI, and the strange future we’re already living in. 💡 Stay Connected: ✅ Subscribe to the newsletter for insights & event invites ✅ Share your feedback — we love hearing from you! ✅ Follow us on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/hqo/  Twitter https://x.com/hqoapp Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hqoapp TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@hqo_official TIMESTAMPS: 01:05 View Boston Reception Recap 03:12 Defining the “Quantum City” 06:03 Panel 1 – Retrofitting the City 10:55 Detroit’s Comeback & Cultural Preservation 13:45 Who’s Responsible for the Future of Cities? 15:05 Panel 2 – The Great Real Estate Reset (Dubai, Africa, California Forever) 18:45 Malls, Culture & the “Fifteen-Minute City” Debate 22:15 Lunch Activation – Picnic App Success 24:18 Keynote – Joe Pine and the Experience Economy 28:21 Keynote – Travis Kalanick on CloudKitchens and Urban Efficiency 33:59 Building Cities for Computers, Not People 36:02 Panel – Capital Markets & Funding the Future 40:31 Blockchain, REITs, and the Future of Real Estate Investment 44:22 Panel – Cities at the Speed of Change 46:12 Parking, Autonomous Cars & Silent Drones 50:27 Quick Hits – Biometrics, Market Recovery & Real Estate News 57:03 OpenAI’s Adult Content Controversy 59:41 Closing Thoughts & STRATA 2025 Tease

  20. 12

    Ep. 12 | Are we in an AI Bubble? How AI Is Rewriting Real Estate and Hollywood

    Last day! 🎟️ RSVP for Strata (Oct 16, MIT Kendall Square): https://www.hqo.com/strata-summit-waitlist/ Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/   The AI boom is building the physical world — massive data centers, chip factories, and new energy grids — at a speed that feels unreal. Venture capital keeps pouring fuel on the fire, while commercial real estate scrambles to keep up with the demand for land and power. In this episode we get into how AI infrastructure is reshaping real estate and venture capital, and why everyone from Bezos to Sequoia sees it as the next big frontier. From underwater data centers and flying taxis to Hollywood’s first AI actress (Tilly), the future is getting weirder — and more expensive — by the minute. And yes, there’s still room for billionaire flexes: private golf courses, three-billion-dollar towers, and one bittersweet goodbye to Calhoon, the MSG-powered legend. In this episode, we cover: 🧠 The AI infrastructure boom — billions are building the future, one server at a time. 💰 Venture capital in overdrive — why too much money might still be a good thing. 🏢 Real estate’s new obsession — data centers, land grabs, and shifting skylines. 🌊 The next frontier — underwater and space-based data centers. 🚁 Flying cars and vertiports — LA’s 2026 Olympic fantasy. 🎬 Hollywood vs. AI — meet Tilly, the actress who doesn’t technically exist. 🏙 Billionaires and “Big Tower Energy” — Miami, golf courses, and ego architecture. 🍜 Saying goodbye to Calhoon — an American classic that deserved better. 🔗 Links & Resources   🎟️ RSVP for Strata (Oct 16, MIT Kendall Square): https://www.hqo.com/strata-summit-waitlist/    💡 Stay Connected: ✅ Subscribe to the newsletter for insights & event invites ✅ Share your feedback — we love hearing from you! ✅ Follow us on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/hqo/  Twitter https://x.com/hqoapp Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hqoapp TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@hqo_official TIMESTAMPS: 01:19 Funny Hockey Story 02:36 Strata Event Details 03:17 AI Bubble Discussion 19:04 Data Centers in Unusual Locations 22:47 Brookfield's New Fund 24:16 REITs to Watch 26:17 Irvine Family Drama 28:46 Car Clubs and AccountabilityAre We in an AI Bubble? How AI Is Rewriting Real Estate and Hollywood 29:21 Big Tower Energy: Ken Griffin's Ambitious Project 30:50 Boston Properties and the Refinance Trend 32:01 Lab Space Oversupply: Challenges and Trends 34:49 Flying Taxis: The Future of Urban Mobility? 39:35 OpenAI's New Video Generator: A TikTok Killer? 47:02 Billionaire Extravagance: Private Golf Courses 47:48 Calhoon Restaurant's Transformation #AI #AIBoom #TechTrends #Infrastructure #VentureCapital #PrivateEquity #CRE #CommercialRealEstate #DataCenters #PropTech #UrbanDevelopment #DataInfrastructure #Engineering #SpaceTech #FlyingCars #TQCIS #HQO

  21. 11

    Ep. 11 | $10B PropTech Exit Coming? Plus AI Actress Sparks Hollywood Panic

    🎟️ RSVP for Strata (Oct 16, MIT Kendall Square): https://www.hqo.com/strata-summit-waitlist/ Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/ AI data centers are the new gold rush, billionaires are measuring towers, and Hollywood just cast its first actress who doesn’t technically exist.    Welcome to the future — it’s weird, lucrative, and slightly unhinged. We get into all the weird, wild ways tech, money, and ego are colliding right now. We talk about the AI-fueled data center craze that might already be overheating, the Big Tower Energy battle between Citadel and JPMorgan, and Tilly Norwood, Hollywood’s first AI actress who’s already getting more attention than most humans. We also cover today’s hottest trends: 🏢 The AI data center gold rush — why everyone’s racing to build them, who’s getting caught in the liquidity trap, and how the smartest players are turning buildings into dynamic, multipurpose “boxes” that mix office, data, and experience space. ⚖️ Zillow vs. CoStar, a.k.a. real estate’s main event: lawsuits, copyrights, and the eternal question — who really owns that listing photo? 💰 Private capital is flowing back into commercial real estate, but only the patient (and the lucky) will win. Hint: Hines might’ve cracked the cycle. 🏙 Welcome to the era of Big Tower Energy — where billionaires like Ken Griffin and Jamie Dimon battle for skyline supremacy, while Boston gets its own shiny new South Station Tower. 🤖 Meet Tilly Norwood, Hollywood’s first fully AI-generated actress — sparking an identity crisis in the film industry and maybe a SAG-AFTRA meltdown. 🚗 Waymo gets pulled over. Yes, a self-driving car tried to dodge a DUI checkpoint and got a ticket. We’re officially in the “AI vs. cops” era. 🏛 How a U.S. government shutdown could freeze key real estate data — forcing lenders and developers to fly blind (and still pretend they’ve got it under control). 🎰 The casino comeback in New York: Steve Cohen’s $8B Queens project, Vegas energy on the East Coast, and why it’s all about local clout meets global flash. 🎬 Pop culture chaos: The Social Network 2 (because apparently Zuckerberg wasn’t done), McDonald’s Monopoly goes digital, and somewhere between the nostalgia and the nonsense, we’re still lovin’ it.   🔗 Links & Resources   🎟️ RSVP for Strata (Oct 16, MIT Kendall Square): https://www.hqo.com/strata-summit-waitlist/    💡 Stay Connected: ✅ Subscribe to the newsletter for insights & event invites ✅ Share your feedback — we love hearing from you! ✅ Follow us on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/hqo/  Twitter https://x.com/hqoapp Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hqoapp TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@hqo_official TIMESTAMPS: 01:18 Instagram Analytics and Viewer Feedback 03:13 Commercial Real Estate Trends 12:14 Residential Real Estate Legal Battles 16:28 CoStar vs. Zillow: The Data Wars 20:40 Private Capital and Market Trends 24:30 Casino Developments and Big Tower Energy 29:00 Big Tower Energy in Boston 29:09 South Station Tower Tour 29:12 Impact on Boston's Skyline 29:18 Tenant Highlights 29:26 South Station Terminal Expansion 30:28 Trendsetting in Real Estate 30:55 PropTech Developments 31:03 MRI's Potential Sale or IPO 33:29 Government Shutdown Effects 36:17 AI's Impact on Entertainment 36:41 AI-Generated Actress Tilly Norwood 42:52 AI and Legal Challenges 43:54 The Social Network Sequel 46:14 McDonald's Monopoly Returns #CRE #DataCenters #AI #RealEstate #Hines #Zillow #CoStar #PrivateEquity #Blackstone #Brookfield #Citadel #JPMorgan #SteveCohen #UrbanDevelopment #GovernmentShutdown #Economy #Markets #Hollywood #TillyNorwood #Waymo #SocialNetwork2 #McDonalds #TQCIS #HQO

  22. 10

    Ep. 10 | Round-Tripping $1 TRILLION

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/ 🎟️ RSVP for Strata (Oct 16, MIT Kendall Square): https://www.hqo.com/strata-summit-waitlist/  In this episode, we get serious… or at least our version of serious.   We dive into multi-billion-dollar funds, cities panicking because their tax base depends on half-empty office towers, and Chicago proudly celebrating a glorious +12% office visit recovery (which is basically still zero, but hey, progress).   Meanwhile, AI becomes the perfect excuse to fire people (“don’t know how to use ChatGPT? You’re out”) while also being the shiny toy giants pass around like trading cards—except the cards are worth billions.    And of course, the Quantum section reminds us that while we’re still arguing here, China and the BRICS are busy building futuristic city clusters like it’s no big deal. We cover today’s biggest trends (and distractions): 🏢 Rhythm Capital buys Paramount for $1.6B — because CRE is nothing if not dramatic. 💸 Cities losing billions in tax revenue — can CRE really be the fiscal hero, or is it the villain in a tailored suit? 🤖 AI round-tripping billions between Microsoft, Nvidia, and friends like it’s Monopoly money. ⚡ Data centers eating up more power than small countries, with Texas leading the charge. 👩‍💻 Accenture firing people for not using AI — “Sorry, you didn’t prompt fast enough.” 🌍 BRICS push quantum smart cities while the U.S. argues about whether cities are even good. 🗑️ Albania’s Prime Minister dodges flying garbage in parliament. 🌊 Baywatch reboot is coming — because apparently we needed that. 👕 Wives roast podcast outfits and random closet T-shirts steal the show.   An episode packed with CRE, AI, quantum… and, yes, red swimsuits. 🔗 Links & Resources   🎟️ RSVP for Strata (Oct 16, MIT Kendall Square): https://www.hqo.com/strata-summit-waitlist/  💡 Stay Connected: ✅ Subscribe to the newsletter for insights & event invites ✅ Share your feedback — we love hearing from you! ✅ Follow us on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/hqo/  Twitter https://x.com/hqoapp Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hqoapp TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@hqo_official TIMESTAMPS: 01:43 Ryder Cup Day One Highlights 02:23 Upcoming Strata Event 04:56 Commercial Real Estate Updates 05:35 RXR's Major Fund and Market Signals 07:51 Rhythm Capital's Big Move 09:53 Tax Revenue Shortfalls and City Impacts 16:49 Chicago's Office Traffic Recovery 17:55 Nuveen's Farmland Investment 20:06 Beverly Hills Mixed-Use Development 24:17 AI Industry Insights and Concerns 26:33 Data Center Expansion Across the US 27:47 The AI Factory Gold Rush 29:46 Job Creation and AI's Impact 32:21 The Rise of PropTech 36:48 AI's Role in Consulting and Job Market 42:16 Global Smart Cities and BRICS 48:50 Baywatch Reboot and Pop Culture 51:54 Show Wrap-Up and Announcements #CRE #RXR #Nuveen #RhythmCapital #Paramount #Taxes #NYC #Boston #Chicago #AI #OpenAI #Oracle #SoftBank #Microsoft #Nvidia #Accenture #Data #Texas #Blackstone  #Quantum #BRICS #TQCIS #HQO

  23. 9

    Ep. 9 | The 70-Hour Work Week Is Back While Governments Hire AI Ministers

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/ 🎟️ RSVP for Strata (Oct 16, MIT Kendall Square): https://www.hqo.com/strata-summit-waitlist/ Fresh off Vegas (yes, wallets lighter, oxygen in casinos still free), we’re back with Episode 9 and it’s a wild one. The Fed’s cutting rates again, Boston wants 700-foot towers in the Financial District, and apparently Silicon Valley thinks the 70-hour work week is cool again.  Meanwhile, Gen Z has basically taken over ChatGPT (and half of them are just messing around with it), and governments are out here hiring AI ministers — shoutout Albania and Estonia. Oh, and Tesla robots? They’re not just folding laundry, they’re landing billion-dollar pharma deals and stepping into UFC cages. Plus, we cover some of the week’s wildest stories: 💸 California’s plan to tax vacant commercial space — smart policy or just silly? 🎰 Manhattan casinos rejected, despite Jay-Z and Caesars backing the bids. 🏟️ Former NFL QBs (Tebow, Elway, Bortles) raising $100M for mixed-use stadium developments. 📺 A&E’s new CRE reality show, The Real Estate Commission, starring Todd from Albany. 🔗 Links & Resources   🎟️ RSVP for Strata (Oct 16, MIT Kendall Square): https://www.hqo.com/strata-summit-waitlist/  💡 Stay Connected: ✅ Subscribe to the newsletter for insights & event invites ✅ Share your feedback — we love hearing from you! ✅ Follow us on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/hqo/  Twitter https://x.com/hqoapp Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hqoapp TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@hqo_official    #70HourWeek #GenZAI #AIMinister #ChatGPT #FutureOfWork #TQCIS #HQO

  24. 8

    Ep. 8 | Brookfield’s $1T Bet: AI Factories, Real Estate & Driverless Cars

    Brookfield’s $1T Bet: AI Factories, Real Estate & Driverless Cars | ep. 8 Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/ 🎟️ RSVP for Strata (Oct 16, MIT Kendall Square): https://www.hqo.com/strata-summit-waitlist/ One of the biggest names in commercial real estate, Brookfield, just held their Investor Day — and we break it all down. With over $1 trillion in assets under management (AUM) and a 19% annualized return over 30 years, Brookfield is declaring the return-to-office debate officially over. We dig into their Super Core, Core Plus, and Value-Add real estate strategies, 15M square feet of leasing with 11% rent growth, and why Brookfield is investing billions in AI data centers — calling them the new railroads. Plus, we cover today’s hottest trends: 🚕 Tesla RoboTaxi App climbs into the Top 10 in the App Store and Waymo driverless cars navigate busy LA streets. 🌆 What autonomous vehicles and drone delivery mean for the future of cities and talent attraction. 🎤 All-In Summit 2025 recap: Eric Schmidt (ex-Google), Kathy Wood (ARK Invest), Ari Emanuel, Triple H (WWE), YouTube’s CEO, and California Forever’s plan to create 40,000 jobs and a hub for advanced manufacturing + AI. 📈 Kathy Wood’s forecast: up to 17% GDP growth with AI, robotics, 3D printing, and biotech convergence. 🚁 Zipline drones cutting maternal mortality 51% in Rwanda. 🪖 Alex Karp (Palantir) on Western values, courage, and geopolitics. 🪙 Crypto and blockchain investing — the next wave of retail investment rails. 🏢 Hasbro HQ relocation to Boston and what it means for CRE taxes. 📉 CPI/PPI cooling and what September interest rate cuts could mean for capital markets. 🍎 Apple Event 2025 takeaways — are AirPods with live translation enough innovation? 🤖 The first AI-generated K-Pop idol lands a $50M deal. 🃏 Pokémon cards as a 3,800% ROI investment opportunity.   🔗 Links & Resources   🎟️ RSVP for Strata (Oct 16, MIT Kendall Square): https://www.hqo.com/strata-summit-waitlist/    💡 Stay Connected: ✅ Subscribe to the newsletter for insights & event invites ✅ Share your feedback — we love hearing from you! ✅ Follow us on LinkedIn https://www.linkedin.com/company/hqo/  Twitter https://x.com/hqoapp Instagram https://www.instagram.com/hqoapp TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@hqo_official    #RealEstate #Brookfield #AI #Technology #Innovation #RoboTaxi #Waymo #Crypto #Investing #Finance    

  25. 7

    Ep. 7 | Sovereign Funds Bet on NYC & Dubai Shows the Future of Cities

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here:⁠ ⁠⁠https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/⁠ This week on The Quantum City Initiative, we hit record before the coffee kicked in - and somehow ended up with one of our most fired-up episodes yet. From slow trains and half-empty casinos to bosses managing entire soccer teams worth of employees, we connect the dots on what’s really happening in our cities.Here’s what we get into: Union Station’s “quick take” and why the feds are back in the train game Amtrak’s 160 mph trains (but still stuck on slow tracks) Vegas tourism crash and the $5B bet to bring it back The 1:15 manager ratio and why everyone’s boss is maxed out Investors buying the American Dream one house at a time Sovereign funds going bargain hunting in NYC Surf parks, Topgolf economics, and why experience wins Pop culture quick hits: Star Wars auctions, K-Pop chaos, and Netflix scarcity plays   Whether it’s trains that can’t catch up, casinos struggling to stay cool, or offices rethinking how work gets done, the future is being built in real time. Grab your (finally brewed) coffee and join us — this conversation might just change how you look at the city around you.   Timestamps: 00:59 Golf Plans and Cancellations 01:59 Anchor Story: Trump's Administration and DC's Union Station 02:43 Legal Perspectives on Eminent Domain 05:15 Amtrak's Infrastructure Challenges 11:41 Vegas Tourism Decline 19:46 Investor Purchases in Housing Market 25:06 Sovereign Wealth Fund's Manhattan Office Investment 27:50 Mixed-Use Development with Surf Lagoon 29:47 Topgolf and Surfing Business Models 31:32 The Manager to Employee Ratio Shift 39:33 The Experience Gap in Real Estate 47:30 Dubai's Smart City Model 53:55 K-Pop and Streaming Strategies #Infrastructure #Vegas #FutureOfWork #HousingCrisis #CommercialRealEstate #ExperienceEconomy #SmartCities #CultureWatch #HQO #TQCI #TheQuantumCityInitiative  

  26. 6

    Ep. 6 | Are Private Cities the Solution? Cap Rates Peak and Churches Return

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/ In this episode of The Quantum City Initiative, we unpack one of the busiest weeks in CRE and capital markets—Q2 earnings from the brokerage giants, Fed uncertainty, REIT fundamentals, and why the old “Class A vs. Class B” system no longer makes sense. We dig into what’s driving leasing resilience, whether a rate cut is the missing catalyst for a full rebound, and why some REITs are quietly winning big even in distressed markets. We also explore cultural and market crossovers—from Lifetime Fitness turning gyms into coworking hubs, to NVIDIA’s $46B “warmup act” quarter, to the new billionaire obsession with building cities instead of buying islands. And yes, we close with pop culture quick hits: Taylor Swift’s engagement, American Eagle’s hot streak, the return of PSLs, and a $13M trading card sale. Here’s what we get into: Brokerage Q2 earnings: CBRE, JLL, Cushman, Colliers, Savills all report double-digit growth Fed policy, rate cuts, and the political pressure shaping CRE REIT leasing, debt paydowns, and why life sciences & industrial still surprise The office “split” — why vacancy averages hide winners vs. losers Lifetime’s work lounges and the next phase of mixed-use real estate NVIDIA’s monster quarter and the paradox of AI demand Quick hits: cap rates, food halls, church construction, and government lease cancellations Platforms vs. AUM: why margin and specialization matter more than vanity metrics Tech billionaires building cities — from Texas to California Forever Culture watch: T Swift + Travis, American Eagle, PSLs, and a $13M MJ/Kobe card Cities aren’t static, they’re evolving in finance, policy, and culture, and we’re here to track it in real time. 👉 Don’t miss the conversation—subscribe to The Quantum City Initiative on your favorite podcast platform and tune in to Episode 6 now. Timestamps: 00:45 Brokerage Q2 Earnings Breakdown 03:30 Fed Policy & the Rate Cut Debate 08:40 REIT Performance & Net Absorption 12:15 Vacancy Rates & the “Class A/B” Myth 18:00 Lifetime Fitness Work Lounges 21:20 NVIDIA’s $46B Quarter & AI Spend 25:30 Quick Hits: Cap Rates, Food Halls, Churches, GSA Leases 30:00 Platform Value vs. AUM 39:30 Why Platforms & Specialization Win in CRE 40:00 Billionaires Building Cities: From Starbase to California Forever 48:30 Taylor Swift’s Engagement & Cultural Heat Check 52:00 Trading Cards, PSLs, and Closing Notes #RealEstate #QuantumCity #CommercialRealEstate #AI #NVIDIA #Fed #ExperienceEconomy #CRE #HQO #TQCI #TheQuantumCityInitiative

  27. 5

    Ep. 5 | The $2.4 Billion Bridge, Eminent Domain & AI Schools

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/   In this episode of The Quantum City Initiative, we break down the first net negative quarter for industrial real estate since 2009, why Cushman & Wakefield thinks downtown office should shrink from 70% to 42% (and why that’s probably wrong), and how Silicon Valley giants are scooping up office towers while everyone else is running for the exits. We look at the ripple effects across culture, policy, and capital—Adam Neumann’s new Flow project in Miami, Cape Cod homeowners losing properties to eminent domain, and Bill Ackman’s AI-driven school experiment that shrinks classroom hours to two a day. Plus, we dig into the “experience gap” in commercial real estate, malls as the original experiential retail (poised for a comeback), and why nostalgia—from hacky sacks to cassette tapes—always finds a way back. Here’s what we get into: Industrial slowdown: net negative absorption and what’s behind it Cushman’s $120B retrofit thesis—and the flawed 42% office mix Why tech companies are buying real estate (and what it signals for CRE) Adam Neumann’s Flow in Miami and WeWork’s strange comeback Eminent domain on Cape Cod: $2.4B bridges and forced home buyouts The “experience economy” and how to actually bridge the gap in real estate Malls, nostalgia, and the future of retail experiences Bill Ackman’s Alpha School: AI, two-hour school days, and the death of cohorts Beer league championships, hacky sacks, and cassette tape revivals Cities are being reprogrammed—in real estate, in policy, and in culture—and we’re here to track it in real time. 👉 Don’t miss the conversation—subscribe to The Quantum City Initiative on your favorite podcast platform and tune in to Episode 4 now. Timestamps: 01:20 Industrial Real Estate Pullback 04:42 Cushman’s 42% Office Mix Debate 10:15 Tech Giants on an Office Buying Spree 16:00 Adam Neumann’s Flow in Miami 18:30 Cape Cod Bridge Project & Eminent Domain 27:00 The “Experience Gap” in CRE 34:15 Why the Experience Economy Matters Now 36:40 Nostalgia: Malls, Cassette Tapes & Culture Cycles 41:30 Bill Ackman’s AI-Driven Alpha School 42:45 Beer League Championships & Closing Notes #RealEstate #QuantumCity #CommercialRealEstate #Innovation #Miami #AI #ExperienceEconomy #CRE #HQO #TQCI #TheQuantumCityInitiative

  28. 4

    Ep. 4 | Is Miami the Next Quantum City? Fast Casual Falls & Bitcoin Breaks Records

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/ In this episode of The Quantum City Initiative, we break down why the $17 fast-casual bowl is suddenly a liability, what BlackRock’s $100B crypto bet means for cities and capital markets, and how return-to-office mandates are being enforced in ways that feel… well, dystopian. We look at the ripple effects of cultural shifts (Gen Z roasting Sweetgreen on TikTok), financial engineering in real estate (the secondary market crossing $100B), and why some cities—like Miami and New York—are roaring back while others are still struggling to reinvent themselves. Plus, we go long on Miami as a “quantum city” case study: crypto capital, regulatory speed lanes, housing pressure, and resilience in the face of climate risk. And, because culture moves markets, we get into Taylor Swift’s business genius, Oasis beer records, and why U.S. alcohol consumption is at a 90-year low. Here’s what we get into: The collapse of fast-casual darlings like Sweetgreen, Cava, and Chipotle—and why memes matter to valuations BlackRock, Bitcoin, and the institutionalization of crypto How PWC and Microsoft are policing badge swipes (and whether surveillance is the new office perk) The $100B real estate secondary wave—and what LPs are demanding from GPs Miami as a programmable prosperity city: crypto, finance, civic APIs, and fast-lane permitting Housing as a local—not national—crisis, and what that means for affordability Energy resilience, AI data centers, and Miami’s looming infrastructure test Why Taylor Swift dropped an album on a football podcast (and what that says about PR) Culture metrics: Oasis breaking beer records, U.S. drinking hitting lows, and what’s next for generational consumption habits Cities are reshaping themselves—in memes, in markets, and in music—and we’re here to follow the signals. 👉 Don’t miss the conversation—subscribe to The Quantum City Initiative on your favorite podcast platform and tune in to Episode 4 now. Timestamps: 01:22 Corporate Casual Chains in Decline 07:25 Crypto's Resurgence 11:11 Return to Office Policies 16:51 Real Estate Secondary Market Trends 21:26 Post-Pandemic Office Trends 22:36 The Snack Wrap is Back! 23:56 Business Lunches and Office Culture 24:41 Miami's Economic Boom 29:23 Housing and Resilience in Miami 36:11 Taylor Swift's Marketing Genius 39:15 US Alcohol Consumption Trends #Miami #QuantumCity #Crypto #Bitcoin #Innovation #RealEstate #FastCasual #Workplace #PR #Culture #HQO #TQCI #TheQuantumCityIniciative

  29. 3

    Ep. 3 | Is AI Changing Real Estate? Plus Key AI Economic Trends

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/ In this episode of The Quantum City Initiative, we track the collision of AI, commercial real estate, and the macro forces shaping both. From California’s stalled projects to Manhattan’s rental boom, we break down the “tale of two cities” playing out in real time.   We dig into GPT-5’s launch — why it’s being called a leap toward AGI, and why hallucinations may not be gone just yet. Plus, we look at the staggering scale of AI infrastructure spending, the sectors big funds like Carlisle are betting on (and avoiding), and whether all this capital could be setting us up for an AI bubble.   Along the way, we hit everything from Uber’s robotaxi push and NASA’s lunar nuclear plans to the unexpected political momentum behind psychedelic research.   Here’s what we get into:   California’s CRE slowdown vs. Manhattan’s rental surge GPT-5’s promise, limitations, and what it means for business AI data center spending that’s outpacing all U.S. consumer spend combined Where $9B in new private equity money is headed — and what it’s avoiding The rebound signs in commercial mortgage lending Uber’s robotaxi partnerships and whether you’d tip a driverless car NASA’s 2030 moon reactor plan — and why geopolitics may be driving it The surprising political revival of psychedelic research for PTSD   Don’t miss out — subscribe now and listen to the full episode to stay ahead of the trends shaping tomorrow’s cities. Timestamps: 01:19 California's Real Estate Crisis 02:45 Manhattan's Real Estate Boom 03:29 Quick Hits: REITs and AI 04:22 GPT-5 Launch and AI Adoption 08:02 Carlisle's Mega Fund and Market Trends 09:04 Surge in Commercial Mortgage Lending 09:47 AI Data Center Spending Boom 12:03 Uber's Push into Robotaxis 13:51 NASA's Lunar Nuclear Reactors 14:32 Psychedelics and Mental Health 15:40 Conclusion and Sign-Off   #ArtificialIntelligence #CommercialRealEstate #GPT5 #DataCenters #AIBubble #PropTech #EconomicTrends #Robotaxis #SpaceTech #PsychedelicResearch #Uber #OpenAI #NASA #TESLA

  30. 2

    Ep. 2 | What’s Really Happening with AI, Data Centers, and Industrial?

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/ In this episode of The Quantum City Initiative, we dig into the signals (and noise) around AI, data centers, industrial real estate, and whether the long-dead office market is actually showing signs of life. We talk about what AI is doing to energy infrastructure, why edge computing might finally matter, and what it would actually take to future-proof cities like Boston or New York (spoiler: a lot). Plus, we get into the hype cycle behind industrial, the return of big office deals, and how cities like San Francisco are suddenly cool again—if you're sitting on a billion-dollar AI valuation. It’s part trend breakdown, part gut check, and part reminder that AI is… well, just really good software. Here’s what we get into: AI’s pressure on the grid — and who’s getting stuck with the bill Why edge computing might change how buildings are designed The real reasons industrial might be cooling (and why that matters) Office REITs, asset sales, and why some landlords are buying again What’s happening in SF — and why talent density still wins How AI is actually showing up in CRE operations (hint: lease abstraction is on the chopping block) And yes… we break down the viral story of alcoholic High Noons showing up in Celsius cans Cities are changing. Again. And we’re here to track it in real time. Timestamps: 00:40 Impact of AI on Urban Landscapes 06:07 Challenges in Supporting AI Infrastructure 08:35 Political Will and City Planning 16:03 Industrial Real Estate Trends 23:18 Office Real Estate Market Rebound 25:47 The Future of Office Spaces 26:18 Economic Opportunities in Traditional Cities 28:08 The Rise of Anchor Tenants 29:08 San Francisco's Tech Resurgence 33:52 AI's Impact on Commercial Real Estate 38:56 The Role of AI in Lease Processing 42:37 Unexpected Product Mix-Ups 44:19 Conclusion and Upcoming Episodes #AI #DataCenters #RealEstate #CommercialRealEstate #OfficeComeback #EdgeComputing #IndustrialRealEstate #FutureOfCities #SmartBuildings #UrbanInnovation

  31. 1

    Ep. 1 | Introducing the Quantum City Initiative

    Powered by HqO - Learn more and join the Quantum City Initiative here: ⁠https://www.hqo.com/the-future-of-cities-begins-now/⁠   We’re back!    It’s been a minute since we’ve been behind a mic. A lot has changed. In cities, in tech, in how we live and work. And honestly? We felt like it was time to get back in the conversation.   In this first episode of Quantum City Initiative, we talk about why we’re doing this now, what’s broken in our cities, and how we start to fix it… Not with buzzwords or pie-in-the-sky theories but with real ideas, frameworks, and people who actually build things.   We walk through how we went from launching a scrappy media startup during the 2008 crash to building HQO, which now powers over a billion square feet of commercial real estate. And how that journey led us back to the same big question we’ve always been asking: how do we make cities better for everyone? It’s part catch-up, part rant, and part roadmap for what’s ahead. Here’s what we get into:   • What a “Quantum City” really is (and why it’s not just tech hype) • How AI, buildings, and local economies are all way more connected than people realize • What happened to Boston — and why we still believe in it • Why AI factories might change everything (yes, even where you live) • The 5 big principles we think future cities should be built on • Why 10% GDP growth in cities isn’t crazy — it’s necessary • And yes… we break down how Sydney Sweeney moved $500 million just by putting on jeans   This is episode one. We're setting the tone. We're building something here, and if you care about cities, community, or where the world is going, we hope you’ll come along for the ride.   Timestamps: 00:00 – Intro: We’re back and setting the tone 01:15 – What is the Quantum City Initiative? 03:30 – Why cities are civilization’s supercomputers 06:10 – Defining the “Quantum City” vs. the “Smart City” 08:45 – Our backstory: From Boston Inno to launching QCI 12:30 – AI, economic disruption, and the decline of urban momentum 15:40 – The 10% GDP growth vision and real-world examples 19:25 – The evolution of HQO and why it matters now 23:30 – From real estate SaaS to a city-scale opportunity 27:10 – Transactional landlords vs. experiential landlords 31:00 – Market trends: occupancy, leasing, and return-to-office fatigue 36:40 – Owner-occupied buildings and the "inside trade" thesis 40:25 – The rise of AI factories and infrastructure play 44:10 – Real estate’s role in the AI race and national growth 48:00 – Big cities vs. small cities: who’s better positioned? 51:20 – The five pillars of the Quantum City model 56:00 – Why this is personal: Boston, community, and what’s missing 01:01:45 – Justin’s story: Social Boston Sports and connecting people 01:06:15 – Pop culture meets market impact: Sydney Sweeney and the $500M jeans   #QuantumCity #FutureOfCities #HQO #AI #SmartCities #UrbanChange #RealEstate #NewBeginnings  

  32. 0

    What is the Quantum City Initiative? | Episode 0

    Welcome to The Quantum City Pod, the show where cities meet supercomputing. Hosted by Greg Gomer and Chase Garbarino, co-founders of HqO, we explore the boldest ideas and real-world breakthroughs at the intersection of AI, urban innovation, real estate, and public policy. Cities have always been civilization’s greatest supercomputers, concentrating talent, accelerating innovation, and scaling human potential. Now, it’s time for the next leap. Each week, we break down how Quantum Cities (intelligent, experience-driven urban systems) are reshaping how we live, work, and thrive. Through expert interviews, case studies, and grounded frameworks, we uncover how smart buildings, data-driven infrastructure, and civic design can transform complexity into clarity. If you're building, governing, investing in, or simply curious about the cities of tomorrow, you're in the right place. The Quantum City Pod is powered by HqO and the Quantum City Initiative. Subscribe and join the mission to build a more dynamic, free, and human-centered urban future.

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ABOUT THIS SHOW

Welcome to The Quantum City Pod, the show where cities meet supercomputing.Hosted by Greg Gomer and Chase Garbarino, co-founders of HqO, we explore the boldest ideas and real-world breakthroughs at the intersection of AI, urban innovation, real estate, and public policy. Cities have always been civilization’s greatest supercomputers, concentrating talent, accelerating innovation, and scaling human potential.Now, it’s time for the next leap.Each week, we break down how Quantum Cities (intelligent, experience-driven urban systems) are reshaping how we live, work, and thrive. Through expert interviews, case studies, and grounded frameworks, we uncover how smart buildings, data-driven infrastructure, and civic design can transform complexity into clarity.If you’re building, governing, investing in, or simply curious about the cities of tomorrow, you’re in the right place.The Quantum City Pod is powered by HqO and the Quantum City Initiative. Subscribe and join the mission to build a m

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How many episodes does The Quantum City Show have?

The Quantum City Show currently has 32 episodes available on PodParley. New episodes are automatically indexed when they're published to the podcast feed.

What is The Quantum City Show about?

Welcome to The Quantum City Pod, the show where cities meet supercomputing.Hosted by Greg Gomer and Chase Garbarino, co-founders of HqO, we explore the boldest ideas and real-world breakthroughs at the intersection of AI, urban innovation, real estate, and public policy. Cities have always been...

How often does The Quantum City Show release new episodes?

The Quantum City Show has 32 episodes. Check the episode list to see recent publication dates and frequency.

Where can I listen to The Quantum City Show?

You can listen to The Quantum City Show on PodParley by clicking any episode. We provide an embedded audio player for direct listening, and you can also subscribe via your preferred podcast app using the RSS feed.

Who hosts The Quantum City Show?

The Quantum City Show is created and hosted by HqO.
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