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by f1yght
1123 days ago
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They're also difficult because modern office buildings just don't lend themselves to small apartments very well. One of the conversions in New York cut a giant hole through the middle of the building so they could have interior units that get light. Giant modern office buildings take a ton of effort to convert. |
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Take these new buildings for example:
SF Offices:
- Salesforce Tower: 1.4mn square feet over 61 floors (23k sqft/floor)
- 250 Howard: 734k sqft over 43 floors (17k sqft/floor)
- 350 Mission: 455 sqft over 30 floors (15k sqft/floor)
Office Elsewhere:
- 10 Hudson Yards (NYC): 1.8mn sqft over 52 floors (35k sqft/floor)
- BMO Tower (Chicago) - 1.5mn sqft over 51 floors (29k sqft/floor)
- Block 158 (Austin) - 720k sqft over 35 floors (20k sqft/floor with bottom floors c.3x larger than top floors)
Newly built large residential buildings in SF were usually 15-20k sqft/floor (e.g., The Avery), so there are actually very few buildings here that don't work for residential.