No, the amount of space used for day-to-day purposes is a standard that is used by insurance companies, banks...and they all have decent buildings. The issue of swing space is much more the ability to have a place that you can move people into and then rehabilitate.
What happens with private developers is that when leases come due, they use the window before other people move in to renovate their buildings, whereas in our own buildings people don't move; they're there. We don't have tenants coming in and out, so we don't have those windows. What we need is some spare footage, so that we can tell people that in three years we're going to move two floors there, do this, and move you back, but that does result....
Maybe the point you're making is that if you calculated that swing space into the average, it would increase it, yes.