A New Urban Comeback Story
Three years after remote work upended real estate, America’s biggest cities are experiencing a revival, and according to Corcoran Group CEO Pamela Liebman, it’s not corporate policy driving the rebound.
“It’s lifestyle, not logistics,” Liebman told Millionaire MNL News in a recent interview. “People aren’t coming back because their companies told them to. They’re coming back because they want to be here.”
From Gen Z professionals craving social connection to high-net-worth buyers rediscovering the cultural pulse of urban life, cities like New York, Miami, and Los Angeles are once again magnetic.
Gen Z Is Fueling Urban Energy
Liebman says Gen Z is leading the urban comeback – drawn by opportunity, social life, and convenience rather than corner offices.
“This generation thrives on community, diversity, and experiences,” she said. “They’re not moving to Manhattan because their bosses told them to – they’re moving because it’s where the energy is.”
Rental demand data backs her up. According to Corcoran’s latest market report, Manhattan leases jumped 18% year-over-year, while Brooklyn’s luxury rental market hit record highs.
Meanwhile, new city transplants cite walkability, nightlife, and cultural access as their main motivators – not proximity to headquarters.
“Gen Z grew up digitally connected but socially isolated,” Liebman explained. “Urban life is their antidote to that. They’re choosing the city as a way to feel part of something bigger.”
Millionaires Are Trading Suburbs for Sophistication
The migration isn’t limited to the young. Affluent buyers are also returning to city centers, drawn by the renewed vibrancy of post-pandemic urban living and a cooling luxury market that’s opened doors to better value.
Liebman says Corcoran’s high-end clients, many of whom decamped to suburban estates in 2020, are quietly buying pieds-à-terre and secondary city homes again.
“We’re seeing millionaires who miss the pulse of the city – the restaurants, the theater, the art scene,” she said. “They spent three years in quiet towns and realized they still crave stimulation.”
In Manhattan alone, luxury condo sales above $4 million rose 22% in Q3, according to Corcoran’s internal data. In Miami and Palm Beach, demand for branded residences and design-led developments remains robust among global buyers.
“The return to cities isn’t just about space,” Liebman added. “It’s about identity. People want to live where things are happening again.”
The Role of Office Mandates – Overstated
While corporate return-to-office policies have increased foot traffic in business districts, Liebman says their impact on housing demand has been largely overstated.
“People aren’t basing their housing decisions on how many days they need to show up to the office,” she said. “They’re deciding based on lifestyle – restaurants, gyms, art galleries, dating, and social life.”
In fact, the hybrid work model is helping reshape urban demand, not diminish it. With professionals spending only part of the week in offices, they’re seeking smaller, central apartments and flexible living arrangements that keep them close to amenities but free from long-term commitments.
“Today’s buyer wants balance,” Liebman said. “They don’t need to live next to their office tower, they just want to live near what inspires them.”
Global Cities Regaining Their Shine
New York, Miami, and Los Angeles are the clear winners of this urban revival, but other global cities, including London, Paris, and Dubai, are seeing similar trends.
Liebman attributes this to a universal desire for connection and access. “Cities are where innovation, culture, and ambition intersect. That hasn’t changed, people just forgot it for a while.”
Corcoran’s international affiliates report a surge in inquiries from young entrepreneurs, creators, and global nomads seeking both work and play in high-energy markets.
“Even with remote work, the best opportunities still happen face-to-face,” she said. “The city gives you that serendipity, the meetings and moments you can’t plan for.”
A More Human Motivation Behind the Move
Ultimately, Liebman believes the urban resurgence is less about economics and more about emotion.
“The return to cities is about feeling alive,” she said. “After years of isolation, people are choosing proximity, culture, and energy over square footage.”
She notes that buyers across age groups now see city life as aspirational again, not stressful. “There’s a renewed sense of gratitude for what cities offer – diversity, creativity, and connection.”
The Bottom Line
For all the noise about corporate mandates and real estate cycles, Liebman says the urban comeback story is simple: people miss people.
Gen Z is chasing experiences, millionaires are chasing meaning, and the city, once written off as fading, is once again where both find it.
As she put it: “You can’t replicate the magic of a great city. Not on Zoom, not in the suburbs. People are realizing that again, and they’re coming home.”





