By Charvi Gupta of Getzler Henrich & Associates LLC
Vacancy rates in office buildings in major metropolitan areas like New York City have surged, driven by the widespread adoption of remote work policies as well as the relocation of major corporate headquarters. With housing shortages exacerbating the issue, there is a growing discourse surrounding the conversion of these vacant office spaces into residential units.
According to The Wall Street Journal, 1 billion square feet of office space sits vacant across the United States. While the numbers cover only office mortgages packaged into commercial mortgage-backed securities (CMBS), they reflect a broader freeze in the lending market for office buildings.
However, the journey from empty office buildings to habitable residences is far from a linear path and comes with considerable challenges. With numerous examples to examine, as well as insights from financial restructuring consultants to consider, it’s clear that office-to-residential conversions are complex to say the least.
Conversion Challenges
The conversion process is becoming increasingly difficult. Construction loans are far more expensive than they were 18 months ago, and banks continue to be cautious about development lending, with many conversion efforts on hold because of higher interest rates.
Although more cities are trying to speed up the process, getting permits can take years. Long approval times are particularly brutal when combined with higher interest rates because developers often have to make debt payments while they wait for the green light.
Without large government subsidies, some housing analysts have doubted office conversions would ever become large enough to help address the U.S. housing shortage.
There are additional challenges involved in the conversion process:
Structural and Utility Limitations: Many office buildings are ill-suited for conversion into residential spaces. For example, some feature deep floor plates that pose challenges in bringing natural light into the newly divided rooms — a feature residential occupants invariably desire. Additionally, centralized utilities and shared bathrooms designed for office tenants necessitate extensive plumbing and HVAC modifications to meet residential standards. Some older office buildings may also boast large courtyards, which can further complicate the conversion process.
Rent Disparities: Office spaces command higher rents per square foot than residential units. This cost differential can deter developers from pursuing conversions, as the potential return on investment may not be as attractive when transitioning to residential use.
Zoning Restrictions: Zoning requirements in many cities may not permit the conversion of office buildings into residential spaces. Overcoming these regulatory hurdles often involves complex negotiations with local authorities and may require changes to existing zoning laws, which can be a time-consuming and uncertain process. Major metropolitan cities and regions around the country are not immune to the ongoing struggles of the office sector, but the epidemic has been highlighted in the San Francisco office market, which hit a new high vacancy rate of 31.6 percent in the second quarter of 2023, according to CBRE data.
Existing Office Tenants: In situations where office buildings have numerous vacancies, some office tenants may still occupy the premises under long-term leases. The process of vacating these tenants before initiating conversion can be protracted and financially burdensome, especially when dealing with 10-year lease agreements.
Examples and Prospects
While the challenges are formidable, some projects, such as the redevelopment of 25 Water Street in downtown New York City, have already begun. These projects serve as testing grounds to evaluate whether cities and states can adapt zoning laws and offer incentives to developers to undertake costly conversions. The result is often luxury rentals and condominiums, emphasizing the need for bigger incentives to address the affordable housing crisis.
The federal government is trying to give conversions a boost. The White House recently stated that it was updating guidance for existing grants and spending programs to make billions of federal dollars available for conversion projects and seek the conversion of more government-owned properties into housing.
Exploring Alternative Options
When conversion is not feasible, building owners facing a vacancy crisis may consider alternative strategies, including:
Negotiation with Lenders: Building owners may explore discussions with lenders to delay and strategize for a market recovery. Depending on their lender relationships, they may secure temporary relief and assess their options.
Building Upgrades: Investing in building upgrades and amenities can attract new tenants and solidify relationships with existing ones. Owners must evaluate the capital required to revitalize interest in the property, keeping in mind the risk of no substantial return if demand for office space remains low.
Partnerships: Collaboration with an external partner can provide financial support for interim action plans, reducing the burden on individual owners.
Diversify Usage: Where zoning permits, owners may consider adding public and retail spaces to create mixed-use developments to enhance property value. However, adaptive reuse projects in the Bay Area, for example, will surely prove challenging. Construction costs in the region remain exorbitantly high, and the demand for the types of adaptive reuse projects that have proved successful or promising in other areas of the country, including hospitality and retail, remains depressed. Demand for housing, especially more affordable housing options, remains high in San Francisco.
An additional example is Chicago’s downtown office space, which posted a 22.4 percent vacancy rate in first-quarter 2023, according to Crain’s Chicago. Some projects, such as the LaSalle Reimagined Initiative, attempt to fill the void with creative solutions to repurpose LaSalle Street’s 5 million square feet of vacant commercial space into affordable, mixed-income housing. The proposal includes a request for funding from the city to help subsidize the projects, which are anticipated to take up 1.6 million square feet of space.
Discounted Sales: In cases where no other options prove viable, some owners resort to selling their distressed office buildings at deep discounts, contributing to lower market comparisons and rent reductions.
Broader Impact
A McKinsey report in July 2023 estimated that between $800 billion and $1.3 trillion may be wiped out from the value of office buildings in what it called the world’s nine superstar cities, with San Francisco and New York being hardest hit.
The office sector relies on a steady stream of debt. Landlords typically buy buildings with big mortgages, and when they mature, they pay them off by taking out new loans or by selling. That worked well when buildings were full and loans cheap and plentiful. In the first nine months of 2019, for example, 88 percent of CMBS office loans were paid off when they matured, according to Moody’s Analytics.
As interest rates and vacancies rose, that share dropped to 71 percent in the first nine months of 2022 and to just 31.2 percent this year. Data from Moody’s showed that 50 percent of CMBS office loans that mature this year are at risk of delinquency.
Many banks try to reduce their exposure to the struggling office sector, and the easiest way to do that is to not issue any new loans.
Completing the complex future outlook are these loans from owners and investors facing defaults with nearby small and mid-sized businesses supporting white-collar workers significantly affected, fluctuating interest rates, and upcoming lease renewals.
The challenges in converting empty office buildings to residential use are substantial, complex and multifaceted. The high financial and logistical risks involved require careful consideration for potential solutions. Both individual owners and the broader economy will need to navigate these challenges in an ever-evolving landscape.
— By Charvi Gupta, director of Getzler Henrich & Associates LLC, one of the nation’s oldest middle-market corporate restructuring and operations improvement firms. Gupta joined the firm in 2018.