| This is actually one of the reasons SF is so well positioned to do this - our floorplates are notoriously small. 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. |
All that is a significant investment in a city with very high labor prices (because most skilled trade types got priced out), so it might not be economical to do such a redesign at the moment.