ehlow
Senior Member
The more companies open offices in both Kitchener-Waterloo and Toronto, the more need there is for travel between the two cities, not less. If you have teams spread across the two sites, then sometimes they work better when they're in the same place; if you have separate teams then sometimes they need to meet to better coordinate.
But generally, having offices that close is a pain and comes potentially with more costs than benefits. IMHO, a KW company opening an office in Toronto is mostly a way of getting non-engineering talent that's hard to find in KW. Connecting the two cities with better transit makes the combined economy much more competitive with other tech areas, like Silicon Valley or New York. (Which is to say that whether people prefer Kitchener or Toronto isn't really the right question.) It means a company can get the benefits of a single office with a broader talent pool, whether it's in KW or in Toronto. It means start-ups in Kitchener can connect more easily with investors in Toronto.
It totally agree, I'm all for better transit between KW and Toronto. It would make Kitchener a more attractive place to live as well since people living there could come to Toronto for cultural events or to go to & from the airport. Many would probably work part of the week in each place. I know some will commute between them, but I'm skeptical a huge amount of people will daily, since the most I'd hope for between Union station and Kitchener would be 1.5 trip (and not for years it seems). Occasional trips like going once a week or weekend trips seem more practical to me, but of course require all day two way service. 1.5 hours is still extremely competitive to the car if you're coming from downtown, but is pretty long for a daily commute including time it takes to get to the station. I know some people would rent condos within walking distance of Union station but it still seems long for a daily commute to me, even if you can work during it.
I agree it's rare to have both offices in both Waterloo and Toronto, although there are a few (ex Shopify). Nowadays Toronto has enough smaller and medium sized tech companies (and at least one large US company Amazon) to provide quite a large job base for those who want to live here as well though. So it's good that those who want to stay in Ontario and are in tech have that option, in my opinion.