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San Francisco's Empty Offices Might Start Converting Into Housing (sfgate.com) 147

"San Francisco's downtown has lost roughly 150,000 daily workers since the pandemic," reports the San Francisco Chronicle.

But on the bright side, "Some of San Francisco's empty office buildings are one step closer to being converted into residential units," reports SFGate: The owners of eight San Francisco office buildings responded to a request from the city for landlords interested in converting their properties into condos or apartments, the San Francisco Chronicle reported... The properties would yield about 1,100 units if they were to all be converted, according to the Chronicle. All of the buildings are located in neighborhoods downtown, including the Civic Center area and the Financial District...

Converting offices to housing is a notably difficult process, especially in San Francisco, where the city's tedious permitting and approvals process has deterred many landlords from pursuing the process entirely. However, that could soon change: The request for interest put forth by the city was part of an initiative intended to jump-start office-to-housing conversions that was announced in June. In March, Mayor London Breed and the Board of Supervisors introduced legislation that would facilitate these conversions by exempting certain downtown buildings from housing requirements that are more difficult to apply to former offices, like rear yard space and a variety of unit types.

Or, as the Chronicle puts it, "The much-discussed push to revive downtown San Francisco by converting empty office buildings to housing is starting to gather real-world momentum, with property owners looking to take advantage of a political climate in which the mayor and Board of Supervisors are desperate to activate the city's struggling central neighborhoods." While converting eight commercial buildings totaling less than 1 million square feet would not put much of a dent in the historic 33.9% office vacancy — more than 30 million square feet of space — the interest is indicative that an increasing number of landlords are accepting the reality that the pandemic and remote work has rendered some buildings obsolete. "We were pleased with the responses — it was more than we had expected, and there was a good variety of buildings," said Anne Taupier, director of development for the city's Office of Economic and Workforce Development. "We think there is a chance to see some game-changing activation...."

Taupier said that all of the property owners said that recent legislation streamlining and lowering affordable housing requirements would be key to making conversions possible. Most of them would be candidates for Mills Act tax credits, which allow cities to reduce taxes for 10 years or more to owners of historic properties.

One of the biggest applications came from Mark Shkolnikov's Group I. "The support from the city has just been remarkable," Shkolnikov said. "They have been frequently checking in to see what they can do to help move this along.
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San Francisco's Empty Offices Might Start Converting Into Housing

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  • To what end? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by RogueWarrior65 ( 678876 ) on Sunday October 01, 2023 @05:46PM (#63892553)

    If people aren't working in downtown San Francisco, why would anyone need to live there?

    • If people aren't working in downtown San Francisco, why would anyone need to live there?

      Well you get the homeless, the poor, and the criminals all living in that concentrated area. And then build a really big wall around it. Do be careful not to fly Air Force one over it though.

      • by jwhyche ( 6192 )

        Well you get the homeless, the poor, and the criminals all living in that concentrated area.

        This would only work if there was some kind of rent control involved. Generally, when a lot of empty apartments hit the market, you sort of expect the rent to go down. That doesn't seem to be the case any more so for that to work you would need the government to regulate the rent. I'm not even sure if that is legal any more.

    • by registrations_suck ( 1075251 ) on Sunday October 01, 2023 @07:12PM (#63892709)

      It makes shitting on the sidewalks more convenient.

    • Despite Right Wing Propaganda, California and San Fransisco are from a failing State/City. While the need for office buildings is declining, there are advantages to to being local to the economy source. Speaking as someone who live in the country, their are some advantages with city life. Being close by to cultural activities, nearby to shops, and access to a diverse set of foods, as well if you happen to be a people person, you get to be around people. While the Office may no longer be needed, the w

  • where the city's tedious permitting and approvals process

    See, this is where changing legislation to cut red-tape makes sense.

    Not like the libertarian utopia where the content and consequence of legislation doesn't matter, only that there is legislation and it must be eliminated at any cost.

  • by zenlessyank ( 748553 ) on Sunday October 01, 2023 @05:53PM (#63892565)

    Can I live from office now?

  • Just don't board them up securely. The homeless will find a way in and convert them to housing in no time.

  • ... lowering affordable-housing requirements ...

    City counsel-persons say that, then demand every apartment has a garden and a lock-up garage.

    Budget accommodation means many services are shared: laundry, parking and showers. City planners whine about empty buildings, then demand that a building without that infrastructure suddenly be re-built to act like a miniature house, at the owner's expense. It's no surprise the owner decides it's more profitable to let the building rot.

    • What you suggest is the easiest conversion path, since offices have communal HVAC and power systems. Have to do major plumbing changes for more shower and toilet facilities, but again if those are installed in communal block where the existing sewage lines are, not impossible.

      • I read an article on doing this in NYC. It turns out that what they do is survey the buildings to specifically select office buildings that are particularly suited for the purpose. There's a lot of stuff that goes into the assessments, and a lot of it is "secret sauce" for the company doing the assessments there. After all, they don't want other companies figuring it out and raising the prices for the buildings because of it.

        When you select like the "best" 5% for conversion, one can probably assume that

        • by jbengt ( 874751 )

          Communal HVAC - I'd picture something like electronically controlled louvers. Include the cost in the rent.

          "Communal" HVAC is almost a non-starter for residential units, at least the "V"entilation portion of that. Though I did do it once for a hotel, it wasn't easy, and it required segregating all the smoking rooms to just a couple of floors and quadrupling the toilet room exhaust for those floors and making it always on. For heating and air conditioning, if apartments don't have totally separate systems

  • Commercial spaces can't be turned into residential-code habitations without lots of investment and sometimes city, county, or state rezoning. Some spaces are cheaper to demo and rebuild as residential because the ROI/TCO isn't there. It can be done, but very selectively or with prior foresight. One advantage though is commercial spaces tend to have mostly higher safety standards than residential ones.
  • This will make absolutely no difference to the situation in SF. Any more than the building of the Renaissance Center made any difference to Detroit's trajectory. Collapses of complex societies are normally attended by lots of local initiatives to remedy local problems, which are either too small scale or are misdirected at what seem like local problems. But they are not really local problems, they are manifestations of society wide problems.

    So, convert to housing. Maybe the new housing can then be sold

    • >the underlying problem is that the places in which the new housing will be located are not places people want to live or work, so its not going to last.

      At the very least, I think every large building should be designed to be arcology-like - a mixed-zone volume with light commercial, residential, and office space. And maybe it'd be worth expecting all large office-style buildings to be internally modular and rezoneable; the infrastructure should exist so you can rip out a commercial or office unit and

    • Uh the new buildings will be in downtown San Francisco which is a place that, for now, many people *want* to be. It commands one of the highest rents in the world. There are many problems in SF and that could change if the city doesn't get it's act together. But you can be sure that those new units will rent.
    • by kackle ( 910159 )
      +1 spot on.
  • I am guessing that developers are going to ask for some tax "considerations" shortly.
  • candidates for Mills Act tax credits, which allow cities to reduce taxes for 10 years or more to owners of historic properties.

    "Finally!" says the politician. "We gave ourselves permission to ignore our own confiscatory taxes!"

  • Raise your hand if you want free money.

  • Residences are almost defined by plumbing. Fresh water, waste water, water handling and flow. Most commercial buildings are VERY deficient when it comes to plumbing. Most have a cluster of restrooms and sinks, arranged in the same location on every floor, for simplicity of construction and water handling. It will not be easy, and will be VERY expensive, to run sewer and water connections to distant corners of the buildings.

    And a year or two later, I'd expect massive plumbing leaks and explosions of black

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