In a recent episode of The Building Texas Show, strategist Michael Shear outlined a vision for distributed office networks as a solution to Austin's worsening commute crisis and regional growth challenges. The episode, titled 'The Future of Work in Texas: Distributed Offices, Fiber Networks & Ending Commutes,' was published on March 9, 2026, and features host Justin McKenzie in conversation with Shear, leader of Strategic Office Networks. Shear argues that the infrastructure decisions made in the next 12 to 24 months will define commuting, housing, and resilience for the next 100 years.
Shear's proposal, which he calls Project ION, involves replacing one 60-floor downtown tower with ten six-floor office buildings sited in suburbs and exurbs such as Cedar Park and Luling. This distributed model aims to reduce commute times and housing costs by bringing jobs closer to where people live. Shear emphasizes that this is a structural transition, not merely a remote-work debate. He cites the 2026 book 'Overbuilt: The High Cost and Low Rewards of US Highways,' noting that 22% of land in 316 U.S. metro areas is paved, echoing the Texas Transportation Institute's warning that regions cannot build their way out of growth.
Central to Shear's vision is the architecting of dedicated, secure communications networks for hospitals, universities, chip manufacturers, and emergency dispatch, not just generic broadband. By pairing edge computing with the Texas data center boom, Shear believes communities can be hardened against climate events, accidents, and geopolitical risks along the high-value I-35 corridor. 'We've essentially entombed ourselves in a 20th century model, and now we're looking at how do we break through that into another dimension,' Shear told McKenzie.
The discussion also connected workforce strategy to public safety and economic resilience. Shear described meetings with fire and police chiefs about deployment readiness during evacuations and referenced Nobel-recognized economic research by Joel Mokyr on how hardened institutions stall innovation. He pointed to Central Texas assets, including the seat of state government, major R&D universities, military complexes, and semiconductor fabs, as both a competitive advantage and a high-value target. Shear also flagged generational economics, noting that where a 30-year career once matched a 30-year mortgage, today's three-to-five-year job tenures put homebuying at risk unless networked hubs let workers change employers without changing communities.
Shear highlighted a recent Christmas-parade live portal linking a Texas town to Ireland as a preview of XR, spatial acoustics, and haptic tools becoming mainstream within three to five years. He also confirmed that Google Fiber crews were laying new lines outside his home during the week of taping. The episode is available now wherever podcasts are heard and on YouTube.

