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Snapchat’s office footprint uncertain after layoff news

Social media firm plans to “reduce” investment in real estate, cut 20% of staff

Snap CEO Evan Spiegel and Santa Monica Business Park at 2850 Ocean Park Boulevard (Getty Images, LoopNet)
Snap CEO Evan Spiegel and Santa Monica Business Park at 2850 Ocean Park Boulevard (Getty Images, LoopNet)

While many companies put up swaths of office space for sublease during the pandemic, one tech firm did not.

Santa Monica-based Snap, the parent company of social media app Snapchat, added 510,000 square feet of leased office space worldwide over the last two years, ending 2021 with 1.4 million square feet, according to a TRD analysis of public financial filings.

But on Wednesday the company announced it will lay off 20 percent of its workforce, raising the question of how much space it will need going forward.

During the pandemic, Snap’s expansion ran contrary to headlines about large amounts of office space available for sublease. More than 15 million square feet of space was put up for sublease in Manhattan from March 2020 through June 2021, according to JLL. In L.A., about 1.7 million square feet of space was up for sublease — a number that has since risen to 4.3 million square feet.

In Santa Monica last year, Snap added 140,000 square feet to an existing lease at its corporate headquarters. And it hasn’t slowed down since. Earlier this year, the company opened a new 38,000-square-foot office in Chicago’s Fulton Market — and signed a 77,000-square-foot lease in Seattle and sublet 46,000 square feet in Palo Alto.

Now, Snap is reeling back its decisions and intends to “reduce” its real estate investment in a cost-cutting effort, the company disclosed in a recent investor presentation. The layoffs for 20 percent of its workforce will shrink its staff by about 1,300 people.

Office landlords and brokers across the country are now wondering whether Snap will put substantial portions of its footprint up for sublease, as it adjusts to a smaller workforce.

Sources familiar with Snap’s existing leases said the company has not yet put any space up for sublease, nor has it exited any of its leases, besides about 27,000 square feet of office space in Venice, where it was formerly headquartered.

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In Santa Monica, the company leases a total of 440,000 square feet at Boston Properties’ Santa Monica Business Park at 2850 Ocean Park Boulevard — a deal that is set to expire in 2026, according to a source familiar with the lease. Boston Properties did not respond to a request for comment.

Snap has about 163,000 square feet of additional space in Santa Monica and Venice, it disclosed in an earnings report earlier this year.

If Snap decides to put up office space in L.A. for sublease, it would join a host of other media and tech firms. NFL Network, Yahoo and 20th Century Studios are some of the firms that are each trying to sublease at least 120,000 square feet of office space across Silicon Beach, according to a Savills report obtained by TRD last month.

About 70 percent of Snap’s global footprint is located in the U.S.

In the San Francisco Bay Area, Snap leases about 10,500 square feet at 444 Castro Street in Mountain View, 33,000 square feet at Hudson Pacific Properties’ 875 Howard Street in San Francisco and the space at 395 Page Mill Road in Palo Alto.

On the East Coast, Snap has a 121,000-square-foot office at the former New York Times building at 229 West 43rd Street In New York City, a property owned by Columbia Property Trust. Snap is still listed as a major tenant at the building.

Snap also recently signed a deal to take two floors at a high-rise office building in Downtown Austin, and has a research and development center in Lehi, Utah.

Snap did not respond to a request for comment.

Sam Lounsberry contributed reporting.

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