| The alternatives are building a building from scratch while these offices sit empty, no? Certainly you must agree retrofits are cheaper than building an entire new building. Also fyi, SF isn’t even allowing gas in new buildings anymore. I agree with your logic when CRE yields 1.5x the rent of residential, but the model needs to be updated now that it's no longer the case. Is your base cases these offices sit empty forever? Get torn down? I think that line of thinking is the one massively ignorant of the realities of real estate. In a city with almost no residential rental vacancies? That's the end-game? EDIT: For everyone direct-quoting: The conversion alone might cost about $400 or $500 per usable square foot, Mr. Bernstein added, and would in many cases be more expensive than building a new development. A recent Moody’s analysis of New York offices found that just 3 percent of the buildings it tracked would be viable for apartment conversions. The median rent for apartments in New York is $55 per square foot, which just 36 percent of office properties now fall at or below — and on top of that, there’s all the cost of conversion. $500 is nowhere near the fully-loaded cost to build new in any US city. The quoted man is comparing the cost to the delta in rent to his out-of-date understanding of what offices can yield. It is just a simple fallacy to believe that SF/NYC offices can command $75/sqft at any reasonable occupancy level. The economics of conversions only don't work when offices command premium rents, it's not some axiomatic fact about the world (the way it was before the pandemic). |
Yes I agree with you, but who pays for it? JLL and CBRE are large and diversified enough that they can eat the cost of their SF commercial properties being vacant.
It doesn't make sense for them to spend funds on retrofitting their properties into apartments when they can regeotiate their mortgage commitment to be much more amenable in the short term, especially when similar residential properties in SF like NEMA, The Gateway, and others continue to have elevated vacancy rates.
You can't force private businesses to do residential retrofits - they'll only do it if there is a viable financial case for them to do it.
Most luxury residential property in SF is owned and managed by Greystar, Avalon, and UDR. These are different companies from JLL and CBRE who own the vacant office buildings. At that point, who pays for the retrofit - JLL+CBRE or the residential landlords line Greystar+Avalon+UDR? It doesn't make sense to either because they are large, diversified international companies that have better opportunities to deploy the capital they have at hand (eg. NoMA in DC, NYC, etc). Why spend $1-2 billion renovating+retrofitting when you can spend the same amount with a better RoI in other markets.