This is an interesting article from Brookings that talks about the "myths of converting offices into housing." What I especially like about the article is that it's nuanced, and it directly addresses many of the myths that currently surround offices. The first one is that "offices are over."
Regular readers of this blog will know that I don't agree with this. And the article provides some good data points to support this:
Office utilization may be below pre-pandemic levels in many cities, but the data suggests that we have not yet hit a plateau. Utilization rates continue to increase, albeit gradually. So if we are to be more precise here, it's not that some people will never return to the office, it's just that it's taking longer than I think many people expected.
That said, this is not the case in all cities. Downtown Salt Lake City, as we have talked about before, is the busiest it has ever been. Similarly, ridership on the Utah Transit Authority network is up 26% from pre-pandemic levels.
Europe is generally ahead of North America with utilization rates in the 70-90% range, according to JLL. And Asia is even further ahead with rates in the 80-110% range. Meaning that, similar to downtown Salt Lake City, there are (many?) cities in Asia where more people are in the office today compared to in 2019.
So I would not be so quick to claim that "offices are over."
For the full article, click here.
Well sort of.
Previously leased to Macmillan Publishers for the last 60 years, the building has been sitting vacant since 2019 and supposedly needs something like $100 million in CapEx to make it leasable again. Four of the five current owners have wanted to renovate it, but the fifth kept blocking it, and so the other partners sued for a "partition auction."
That auction happened last week, and even though the four owners were really trying to lock down the 25% share that they didn't own, the auction was won by an outsider at $190 million. That said, a 10% deposit was to be due the following day and, apparently, that never happened. So maybe it hasn't sold yet. But whatever, it's still interesting to think about its purchase price.
According to Wikipedia, the Flatiron Building is 255,000 square feet. So at $190 million, the building was "purchased" for $745 per foot. Assuming that it needs another $100 million, that's another $392 psf, for a total of $1,137 psf.