Remote Work Is Gutting Downtowns, Will Cost Cities $453 Billion (businessinsider.com) 273
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Insider: Deserted downtowns have been haunting US cities since the beginning of the pandemic. Before the pandemic, 95% of offices were occupied. Today that number is closer to 47%. Employees' not returning to downtown offices has had a domino effect: Less foot traffic, less public-transit use, and more shuttered businesses have caused many downtowns to feel more like ghost towns. Even 2 1/2 years later, most city downtowns aren't back to where they were prepandemic. [...] The increased cancellations of office leases have cratered the office real-estate market. A study led by Arpit Gupta, a professor of finance at New York University's Stern School of Business, characterized the value wipeout as an "apocalypse." It estimated that $453 billion in real-estate value would be lost across US cities, with a 17-percentage-point decline in lease revenue from January 2020 to May 2022. The shock to real-estate valuations has been sharp: One building in San Francisco's Mission District that sold for $397 million in 2019 is on the market for about $155 million, a 60% decline.
Other key indicators that economists use to measure the economic vitality of downtowns include office vacancy rates, public-transportation ridership, and local business spending. Across the country, public-transportation ridership remains stuck at about 70% of prepandemic levels. If only 56% of employees of financial firms in New York are in the office on a given day, the health of a city's urban core is negatively affected. The second-order effects of remote work and a real-estate apocalypse are still playing out, but it isn't looking good. Declines in real-estate valuations lead to lower property taxes, which affects the revenue collected to foot the bill of city budgets. Declines in foot traffic have deteriorated business corridors; a recent survey by the National League of Cities suggested cities expect at least a 2.5% decline in sales-tax receipts and a 4% decline in revenue for fiscal 2022. "The solution to the office-housing conundrum seems obvious: Turn commercial spaces like offices into housing. Empty offices can become apartments to ease housing pressure while also bringing more people back to downtown areas," reports Insider. "But after two years, few buildings have been converted." According to the report, it's being hampered by hard-to-justify construction costs and local housing rules.
"Overall, combating the death of downtowns requires a reworking of how we think about cities and the value they provide," the report says. "The urban author Jane Jacobs proclaimed in her famous 1958 article for Fortune magazine, 'Downtown Is for People,' that "'there is no logic that can be superimposed on the city; people make it, and it is to them, not buildings, that we must fit our plans.'"
"The economic health of cities is intrinsically linked to how space is used or unused, and right now downtowns are undergoing a massive shift. Despite the sluggish movement, it's in cities' best interest to figure out how to quickly convert office-centric downtowns into something more suitable for everyone."
Other key indicators that economists use to measure the economic vitality of downtowns include office vacancy rates, public-transportation ridership, and local business spending. Across the country, public-transportation ridership remains stuck at about 70% of prepandemic levels. If only 56% of employees of financial firms in New York are in the office on a given day, the health of a city's urban core is negatively affected. The second-order effects of remote work and a real-estate apocalypse are still playing out, but it isn't looking good. Declines in real-estate valuations lead to lower property taxes, which affects the revenue collected to foot the bill of city budgets. Declines in foot traffic have deteriorated business corridors; a recent survey by the National League of Cities suggested cities expect at least a 2.5% decline in sales-tax receipts and a 4% decline in revenue for fiscal 2022. "The solution to the office-housing conundrum seems obvious: Turn commercial spaces like offices into housing. Empty offices can become apartments to ease housing pressure while also bringing more people back to downtown areas," reports Insider. "But after two years, few buildings have been converted." According to the report, it's being hampered by hard-to-justify construction costs and local housing rules.
"Overall, combating the death of downtowns requires a reworking of how we think about cities and the value they provide," the report says. "The urban author Jane Jacobs proclaimed in her famous 1958 article for Fortune magazine, 'Downtown Is for People,' that "'there is no logic that can be superimposed on the city; people make it, and it is to them, not buildings, that we must fit our plans.'"
"The economic health of cities is intrinsically linked to how space is used or unused, and right now downtowns are undergoing a massive shift. Despite the sluggish movement, it's in cities' best interest to figure out how to quickly convert office-centric downtowns into something more suitable for everyone."
Objection (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Objection (Score:4, Informative)
Sustained.
Oh no! Poor landlords! (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm "sorry" that your bulletproof investment didn't work out. Me and the rest of the society will surely be thinking about you when you start getting close to the breadline by earning millions instead of billions.
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Cut me a buggy whip. Rule number one of large-scale socioeconomic shocks is that things *NEVER* return to the way they were. History is littered with examples going back at least a thousand years.
That said commercial real estate was wildly over valued prior to the pandemic anyway. Go watch some of Louis Rosmans videos on the topic. A correction was long overdue.
Its a buying opportunity. (Score:3)
After Brown vs Board of Education decision there was a white flight to suburbs. Local real estate developers, gas companies and auto dealers worked together to sell an American Dream of single family homes its own lot and weekend spent mowing lawns.
That generation is nearing their end of lifespans. The new generation is more welcoming of diversity. Already we see gentrification of many neighborhoods, Offices becoming apartment complexes, downtown school districts reviving etc will happen. So the situation is not going to be dire for downtown real estate. In the long run.
The single family homes, chores of lawn mowing, drive way snow clearing, leaf raking etc are not really very attractive to people. So the real danger, in the long run, is for those two acre wooded lots housing 4 bedroom colonials. They might not keep up with inflation. They will be even more car dependent.
Re:Its a buying opportunity. (Score:5, Insightful)
You know what is great about single family homes? Independence. You don't have neighbours playing music, banging doorframes, having loud conversations or being otherwise disturbing your own life at any and every time of the day. Peace and quiet.
Re:Its a buying opportunity. (Score:4, Insightful)
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I've been living in a hell of a place for 3 years now. I'm looking to buy a detached house right now, make it my last rental. Having neighbours is hell on Earth. Only yesterday I had a couple shagging since 10:30pm til 3am roughly every 15 minutes, and she's a loud model. Remarkable stamina, but my sleep deprivation and ears can't stand it no more.
Re:Its a buying opportunity. (Score:4, Funny)
Only yesterday I had a couple shagging since 10:30pm til 3am roughly every 15 minutes, and she's a loud model. Remarkable stamina, but my sleep deprivation and ears can't stand it no more.
Viagra. It's a helluva drug.
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Absolutely. My home in the suburb is fantastic. It's a generally quiet neighborhood of white collar and working class folks, and nice friendly neighbors. I can fix up my home however I like.
It's a great long-term investment as well. My home has quadrupled in value over the last twenty years. I can sell it and move somewhere cheaper when I want to retire if I want. And the monthly mortgage payment is now a lot lower than renting, since it stays pretty constant.
No way you'd drag me back into an apartmen
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This. After 20 years living in a major city I am done. I want that single family home where my neighbors are appropriately far enough away from me.
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You know what is great about single family homes? Independence. You don't have neighbours playing music, banging doorframes, having loud conversations or being otherwise disturbing your own life at any and every time of the day. Peace and quiet.
I feel like this view depends a lot on what you mean by 'apartment living'.
In many places I've come across that use the north american city model (car based transport), apartments are just clusters of homes stacked on top of each other within suburbia. If you want to get anywhere, you still have to get in your car. Sometimes there might be a strip mall within walking distance, but it will be next to a big road so you won't want to 'hang out there'. You have to drive to get to a nice park and the green space
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You know what is great about single family homes? Independence. You don't have neighbours playing music, banging doorframes, having loud conversations or being otherwise disturbing your own life at any and every time of the day. Peace and quiet.
You know what's bad about them? All the things the OP mentioned. It comes as a shock to many Slashdotters that not everyone thinks exactly the same way as they do.
We own a single family independent home, and yet we choose to live in an apartment. And yes we do get the occasional noise (and make some of our own). But our pros/cons list is weighted differently than yours.
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We fix overcrowding (Score:3, Funny)
and they bitch about it. MakeUpYourMind!
turn empty offices into public housing (Score:2)
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That's a pretty decent idea.
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It sucks. As others have also pointed out, you're ignoring the costs of conversion, which are more expensive than just bulldozing it at starting from scratch. And become even more reasonable as the building continues to lose value. If a building was worth $10 million 40 years ago, reached a peak because of inflation of $250 million, and drops back down to $10 million, just knock it down. Get over the "sunk costs" fallacy.
The UK has tried this, and the result is hugely substandard housing slums.
Re:turn empty offices into public housing (Score:4, Informative)
Rental pricing has increased far above the rate of inflation.
Rental pricing for housing has skyrocketed because the giant real estate conglomerates own both the residential and the office buildings in cities and they're desperately trying to stem the bleeding in their cash-flow. They're not about to make residential rates cheaper now. They can't.
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Wish I had mod points. This is a big part of the equation, even if it is an over-simplification.
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Most commercial buildings would make bad houses (Score:5, Informative)
Commercial buildings like offices will never make great homes. Despite conversions, they are left with large windows, high-ceilings and poor insulation which makes them ridiculously expensive to run. They also suffer from noise issues between flats because partition walls are usually really thin, in contrast to load-bearing walls inside purpose-built flats which usually separate separate flats. It's also very difficult to make such conversions meet safety standards since most housing regulations (where I live) state that all flats should be self-contained from the fire safety point of view, so that a fire in one flat doesn't lead to the entire building burning down.
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High ceilings? No problem. [wikipedia.org]
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When you convert you don't build partition walls. They are as sound-attenuated l as the builder wants them to be and fire rated. The windows can be dealt with gracefully, although they won't be operable without a lot of work.
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Re: Most commercial buildings would make bad house (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually, commercial buildings are significantly better built than residential units. Commercial buildings have steel reinforced concrete floors so you would never hear your upstairs neighbors, triple glazing, floor to ceiling windows. The interior walls could be made arbitrarily well and to arbitrarily high levels of noise reduction because they are NOT load bearing.
The real problems with commercial buildings as residential is that only a small fraction of the space available on a single floor has access to windows. This is around the perimeter. meaning that the units themselves must be large otherwise the space is generally considered uninhabitable. This results in high per-unit prices, aka âoeluxuryâ apartments. Commercial spaces are rented out as curtain walled square footage. This means that you can rent out enormous open spaces. Also, in commercial real estate, you can make people sit around in enclosed spaces with no windows, which is verboten in residential.
Nowadays, residential buildings around 6 floors or less have become mostly about wood construction. It builds up fast, is cheaper than commercial construction, and is easier to deal with when it comes time for eventual demolition. A steel and concrete commercial building is MUCH better built than that, for better or for worse.
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Despite conversions, they are left with large windows, high-ceilings and poor insulation
High ceilings and poor insulation describes about half of the UK housing stock, including my house. I love having high ceilings (3m or so here).
But yeah the fire safety thing is something of a problem. Evacuating a bunch of adults during the day is a different prospect from a bunch of families at night.
Too bad... we'll just have to deal. (Score:5, Insightful)
I worked for about a year and a half at a contract job at a downtown high rise just before the pandemic hit. The commute was absolute misery... a real daily slog both ways, and the parking was just stupid expensive and insufficient. Normally I'd have shifted my hours later, but if I came in late, I wouldn't get a parking spot.
Really, although the job was nice, trudging into work every day was miserable, and there was zero reason not to work remotely. In fact, if I wasn't feeling well or got snowed in, I DID work remotely, but for reasons, we could only do that in exceptional circumstances. Now, people realize there's no reason that shouldn't be the norm, with coming into an office the exception. We're going to lead better, happier lives because of it. Or at least, I will. The social butterflies or people without a quite, private home office won't be as happy without an office I guess.
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You do know there's a happy medium? Many of us have decent set-ups at home. Why not just invite one of two colleagues to work at your place instead of all of you commuting to some office?
Provide them decent seating, screens, connectivity and food, let them bring their pets, and you're all set. And you get to avoid the office jerks, the micromanaging bosses, the demotivators.
You could even turn it into a floating "work hub", moving from one home to another. Most of us have spare mice, keyboards, and scr
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Because I like the structure a commute and regular schedule gives my day. And also, how do I make friends with colleagues enough to invite them into my home if I only see them through a stinkscreen. I want to work in person, I want to ride the train.
If your screen stinks, you're holding the toilet paper wrong.
But seriously, you're free to do a mixed mode - some in person and some at home. Then after a while, decide who else you'd like to have over to collaborate with. As for riding the train, since you won't have to do it when everyone else is doing it, the commute will be more enjoyable.
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I am living in Germany and the cities are designed very differently to the USA. The downtowns are not dying because people live there. The cities are designed to be walkable. The people I work with are the people I work with they are not my friends. I can work from home and spend more time with my friends. I still go around the city and use public transit to get where I want to go.
Creating a large area in USA cities zoned for only commercial usage was a dumb idea all along. It is a major reason for why comm
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Housing 2008 = Commercial real estate 2023 (Score:2)
Either way, the banks are in a wold of counterparty hurt, waves batter the rest of the economy and trigger a Great Recession
The last thing I'm worried about (Score:2)
In the grand scheme of things, that money isn't lost but shifted elsewhere. Shit happens.
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In the grand scheme of things, that money isn't lost but shifted elsewhere. Shit happens.
Let me fix that for yu.
In the grand scheme of things, that money isn't lost but shifted elsewhere. Good things happen. Less carbon footprint, more small businesses move to the burbs, making neighborhoods more enjoyable, people can use the time formerly wasted on commuting to do things like walk around the block with their dog, meet neighbors, or just take some time to just enjoy life.
And then there's the money saved from not having to commute. That alone nullifies the "cost-of-living" crisis.
potential profit lost vs. cost (Score:5, Insightful)
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Sorry, I do have slight dyslexia.
You can't fix city budgets by converting (Score:5, Insightful)
commercial real estate to residential. Commercial real estate is taxed at more than double residential. It doesn't solve a cities problems. While some buildings may be converted many are not designed for residential purposes. Building codes would need to be rewritten. Zoning would need to change. City budgets need to be reduced. A ship this large will takes years to change direction and I would bet that business will adjust before governments do.
I have no faith, with all the fake news, that this can be accomplished quickly. We will adjust within 5 to 10 years. Cities that were managed well will feel a little pain. The cities that weren't are going to have hard time of it. In the end citizens will pay.
It won't cost them anything (Score:4, Insightful)
Money that wasn't theirs to begin with can't be lost. They made financial assumptions and the were wrong. Such is life
They need to change how they do things in light of the new paradigm, make new assumptions of lower expected revenue and move on. And quit whining.
you want downtown housing? (Score:3)
The only way people will live there is if it's NOT a place for shitty people.
cf Cedar Square West, Mpls. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
"...The complex was thus initially a mixed-housing initiative earmarked for both high-income and low-income residents, including renters and leasers. According to Rapson, who designed the towers and still lived and worked in the neighborhood, the buildings' new owners did not take proper care of the buildings after converting the structures into subsidized housing to benefit from a 10% state subsidy in addition to regular rental revenue. Members of the media have used nicknames such as the "Ghetto in the Sky", and the "Crack Stacks" to describe the housing complex.[6]
A string of homicides in the early 1990s also contributed to a negative image. ..."
The rest of wiki tries hard to spin it as 'not so bad' but...it's still a shitty place.
Example: Biggest building in MO for $4 million! (Score:3)
How low can commercial real estate go?
Biggest office building in the state of Missouri, a cool $4 million. 1 million square feet.
https://www.ksdk.com/article/n... [ksdk.com]
(it doesn't have parking, I have a friend that worked there, hated it)
Good. (Score:3)
Schaedenfreud. Everything got so expensive in cities that the quality of life was going down. Only the most ritzy of stores could survive, along with a few convenience stores. Also crime, homelessness, and drug abuse were rampant even in areas that had been 'gentrified'. I am most familiar with this happening in Boston but it is common in other cities as well.
I refute this wholesale! (Score:2)
Remote work has emptied offices and they've stayed empy, offices that were often once appartments or are in areas suitable for apartments and these property owners flat refuse to repurpose the real estate, instead hanging on to 'losses' from it. In my city we have literally thousands of offices that have been empty for 10+ years and we have a housing crisis. 'Gutting' is a crazy way to say the property owners are unwilling to repurpose property.
You wanna use downtown again? (Score:2)
And converting to residences won't work. Hmm. Where else do masses of human beings have to go, stay put for 8 hours and then return back home?
Schools, that's where.
Yes, the idea of young kids forced to commute long distances is atrocious and should NEVER happen. But this can work for college students.... Use student pass for train to the CBD, get educated, walk in local park, go home.
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Also, some of that space can be converted to dorms rather than apartments. The isolation rules are a lot looser, and they'd use the existing communal restroom facilities rather than having to plumb each apartment. Then the students don't have a terrible commute, they basically have the same thing they have now only it's in the middle of a city instead of closer to the edge of the city.
Housing for Homeless (Score:4, Interesting)
Just turn them over to the homeless "as is". They're already living in tents, so this would be an improvement. No need to refurb the buildings. Just let the homeless move into them and manage them as they will. Treat the buildings like huge homeless camps.
Care factor: zero (Score:3)
Re:Uh... zoning. (Score:5, Insightful)
That is the main point of not only the article but even the summary itself, that it is red tape getting in the way.
Did you even read the summary?
Right! (Score:5, Interesting)
Cities can change zoning over night . The city council meets, votes to rezone and wa la , business only district is now mixed business and residential. For years cities poured on parking stickers you had to buy to park there, upped sales taxes on bars and restaurants. Now they wonder why people don't want to work there ? Serves them right.
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Re:Right! (Score:5, Interesting)
So nobody wants to live there and nobody wants to work there. That drives the price down. The city can purchase areas cheap, demolish them, and turn them into parks and other amenities. Shortly after, you have a near city-centre area that has some accommodation, some jobs, green spaces, and everything you need within walking distance. You'll find people are much more interested in living there then.
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Of course, if there's tons of cheap houses with gardens in the suburbs and people have the money they might not be willing to live in downtown apartments but I guess that's not true (for everyone at least).
Re:Right! (Score:5, Interesting)
They can rezone a business district as residential, heck, they can rezone it as a tropical beach or a rainforest or a ski resort if they like, but why would anyone want to live in a set of echoing concrete canyons no matter what they're zoned as?
Ease to commute and walking accessibility to commercial centers. Tokyo and other Japanese cities get this balance right. I've worked remote and hybrid schedules for years before the pandemic. Some people like full time remote. I personally prefer a hybrid schedule.
For perspective, I own a home with a nice yard and a lake view, but then I have to drive several miles just to go to a gas station or supermarket. OTH, my experience in Tokyo or Manhattan was pleasant in the sense that I could just walk across the street to buy whatever I needed or just walk a few blocks to take the subway.
There are many ways to live life. What works for me might not work for you, and vice versa.
The pandemic gave people a chance to see that there's more to life than being a rat in a maze, can you blame the rats for not wanting to go back in there?
This is such a myopic outlook in life, comparing people to rats or complex life issues as a rat in a maze. Life is far more complex than what your personal preferences allow.
Re:Right! (Score:4, Informative)
wa la
voilà
Re:Uh... zoning. (Score:5, Funny)
Did you look at which sight you're on?
Of course I didn't read it.
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+1, True Slashdot Reader
Re:Uh... zoning. (Score:5, Funny)
Did you look at which sight you're on?
Presumably the person has such bad eyesite that he can't.
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But it's not just red tape. Residential buildings and office building are NOT interchangeable. They are constructed very differently. Converting office space into residential units is unfathomably expensive. It would almost be easier/cheaper to entire gut the entire building and start over.
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It depends on how efficiently you want to use the space; if you sacrifice some space efficiency it is not hard at all. It is a lot of work, and you do not do it if you think things might reverse. For San Francisco, the challenge is that downtown (FiDi/SoMa) lacks amenity space to support housing. The other issue is you are going to need to allow/force low income housing and other less profitable uses on developers to make the downtown work.
Happy to not own any urban real estate. It is going to be a challeng
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Space is just one of the issues. Plumbing is the big one, with electrical not far behind. Lack of windows/exits/fire escapes is another big issue. It's not an easy conversion by any means. And that assumes these buildings are in places people would actually want to live. Like you said, businesses and amenities in those areas cater to daytime workers, not 24/7 residents.
Re: Uh... zoning. (Score:2)
Have you ever heard of something called a loft?
People have been living in former commercial spaces for hundreds of years. It's not as complicated as you make it out to be.
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Lofts are typically former industrial buildings and warehouses, not office space. Huge difference. Also not very efficient space-wise (again, due to being in retrofitted industrial buildings).
Re: Uh... zoning. (Score:5, Insightful)
I have heard of lofts. Almost all of them are in old buildings with very high ceilings; 10 to 12 to 14 feet perhaps.
That excess overhead provides plenty of space to hide additional plumbing, ducting, and electrical lines.
Even the floors tend to be thick concrete that can easily carry the additional weight of required renovations and tolerate the added dynamic & static loads of residential living.
Most modern buildings use thinner concrete floors (lighter weight) poured over a corrugated steel deck (to hold the concrete floor up). Some are architecturally limited in the types and amount of loads they can safely carry.
Re:Uh... zoning. (Score:4, Interesting)
That is the main point of not only the article but even the summary itself, that it is red tape getting in the way.
Did you even read the summary?
Reading the summary is a violation of Section 3.1.4 of the Slashdot user agreement.
As for reading the article itself, which you publicly admitted to for some baffling reason, means you are in major violation of Section 4.2.
I hope I don't need to spell out what these wanton violations of the Slashdot code mean for your karma balance.
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Each project can be exempted from any rule by zoning boards, variances. If the board wants to rewrite the rules, that's what they can do.
Zoning was mentioned in one sentence and I'd say the 'hard to justify construction costs' is a much bigger hurdle. Did you even read the article or just looking for your chance to spout off about something boiling inside?
Re:Uh... zoning. (Score:4, Funny)
It's a pity that zoning is outside of human control. It always sucks when the needs of human beings run up against the laws of nature.
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Yeah, just try to explain to them that matters can't exceed the speed of law, or how Environment=motor*combustion^2. It's like talking to a brick wall.
Re:Uh... zoning changes to save the cities (Score:2, Insightful)
The authors know what they are taking about, it's a clever push to cities to adapt zoning and ordinances for non-luxury residential construction. This point has been made many times already but now's a better time to get city councils to listen.
Without local government participating in the process to seriously eliminate red tape and incentivize downtown residential development, there's no way to build anything interesting except luxury construction (unaffordable). Developers can sell plenty of cheap garbage
Re: Uh... zoning changes to save the cities (Score:2)
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It's not affordable because of the way cities are designed, with a huge concentration of commercial properties all in one area with very few residential properties in/around requiring people to constantly travel back and forth.
You solve that by mixing residential and commercial, so the vast majority of people who work in the commercial properties also live nearby.
Also while these stupidly designed concentrated commercial districts are suffering, residential areas have actually improved a lot. These resident
Re: Uh... zoning changes to save the cities (Score:2)
I appreciated city life as a young-ish adult, for social reasons. Beyond that, though, I see no sustained utility in my life. Even the very richest in my employment hierarchy history all elected to not live in the city. Huh, weird.
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The authors know what they are taking about,
Absolute bullshit by the authors.
I'd suggest they know more than you do...
Converting an office tower to living space will cost more than just demolishing it.
Absolute rubbish. The gross construction costs of tower blocks dwarfs the costs of the internals, by close to 2 orders of magnitude. Retrofitting the internals, while more expensive, won't even dent the concrete budget for a skyscraper, unless you intend on going full Trump, with gold taps and marble floors.
Office layouts are not designed as living quarters. No way to open the windows, no balcony, dividing the floors up to give a small enough floor space for each unit to be justifiable will result in units 8' wide by 60' long. And then you have to install individual toilets, showers, drains, kitchens, sinks, wiring, etc.
Correct, office layouts are not designed as living quarters. That's why you'd tear down the internal partitions, and restructure. Broadly speaking (and obviously
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We have this little thing called taxi medallions..
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Those medallions are indeed now very little... as in worth very little compared to what they were previously worth. WFH and Uber/Lyft effectively made Taxis an endangered species.
In Chicago, about a decade ago (pre-uber), a medallion was worth north of $350,000. People used them as an investment vehicle (see what I did there?). Drivers bought them with plan to eventually sell and retire. They were rare, no more were being made, and you could buy and
Re:Uh... zoning. (Score:5, Informative)
Just to make sure we're not hand-waiving the whole "physical conversion bits", office space and living space are vastly different in floors, walls, roofs, doors, plumbing/sewage (ESPECIALLY), and power. Effectively, you're looking at a full gut job for most "office" buildings and possibly massive changes to the lines/pipes leading to the buildings.
Add the cost of that renovation on the likely remaining mortgage on the original build and you're well into cost-prohibitive.
So it's not just recalcitrant boards and committees. It's also cold hard cash.
Re: Uh... zoning. (Score:2)
I live in a converted office building. Someone saw the signs a couple years ago and bought up an old historic skyscraper (by early 1900s standards) to turn it into apartments.
Yes, it costs money. But unless your whole city is already gutted like a rust belt city, residential real estate is still way more profitable than empty commercial real estate. And who's buying commercial real estate? It's not like you can sell and cut your losses.
Also, there are good ways to approach this that are less capital intensi
Re: Uh... zoning. (Score:2)
Reading is fundamental.
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Commercial building are built different than residential. Sometime quite differently.
They won't allow it without rezoning? (Score:2)
Now whether or not the old folk will let that happen who knows. They kind of like being able to sell the house the government built for them for half a million dollars in retirement money. And yeah when the government builds the entire city around your house that made it possible for you to live there they built the house. Throwing u
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I completely agree with you, except here:
sell the house the government built for them for half a million dollars in retirement money
Those values are way higher than 500k these days
And, for the record, I'm bringing up zoning laws because it's a regulatory nonsense that still needs to be addressed, because it is legally enforceable within the jurisdiction -- yes they can simply rezone it with a simple committee meeting, but I cannot fathom if they will or will not (that would be omniscience that I do not possess). What is important here, in addition to the OBVIOUS POLITICAL ASPECTS (ffs, sometimes
Re:They won't allow it without rezoning? (Score:5, Insightful)
When you see the walk-in closets that pass for apartments in NYC and still charge four figures in rent, the challenge may not be as great as you think. Most office buildings have excessive amounts of power, and it's frequently modular to boot, especially for something like a call center that has a phone, lighting and a computer every 40 sq. feet. Plumbing is indeed a necessity, but most buildings have a decent infrastructure to support multi-stall restrooms. Those same cube farms typically have drop ceilings, and sufficient space between the ceiling and the next floor to support lighting, ventilation and cabling (and yes, plumbing).
It's still not easy. It's not entirely cheap, either, but workplace safety means that those buildings already meet multiple safety codes.
Biggest issue would be the need to keep weight down, so lightweight construction (and sound deadening) would be required.
Whether anyone wants to live there is another question.
Re:They won't allow it without rezoning? (Score:5, Informative)
Where there is Profit, there is a way
Chicago is a top city for commercial-to-apartment conversions [chicagoagentmagazine.com]
by Zayd Muhammad October 05, 2020
Commercial buildings are being converted faster than ever over the last decade with approximately 778 old buildings made into apartments since the 2010’s, according to a blog post from RentCafe.
Re: (Score:2)
Nope. Not possible.
Slashdot readers have Spoken! ;)
Re: (Score:3)
the house the government built for them
I think you'll find that "the government" you're talking about is a subset of "the old folk" you're talking about, both the elected members and the actual people with the hammers and saws. It certainly wasn't millennials building the houses that "the old folk" have been living in for decades.
And where do you think the government got the money to build all of that? You can't actually "borrow from future generations" when you're talking about construction materials and labor. You can stick numbers in a spread
Re:Uh... zoning. (Score:5, Interesting)
I like the way Japan handles zoning. Most areas are mixed use. Residences and small offices/factories mixed together. It creates very walkable towns and cities, with lots of local character.
Re:Uh... zoning. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3)
Re:Not cities, billionaires (Score:4, Insightful)
I can't stand corporate media.
Yep. This whole article reads like it was pulled from the talking-points bulletin of the real estate market.
Before the pandemic, 95% of offices were occupied. Today that number is closer to 47%.
It needs to keep going down until the occupancy rate reaches a reasonable level. I'd consider 2.5% to be reasonable, as it's enough to keep anyone from trying to revive the madness of in-office work once it dies a much-deserved death.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: This is just a correction (Score:2)
Office space isn't the majority of downtowns, though it usually forms the core. Downtowns are desirable for lots of reasons beyond office space.