The City of San Francisco released a Request For Interest to identify office building conversions that city officials could help expedite with zoning changes, regulatory measures, and financial incentives.
The city’s Office of Economic and Workforce Development and Planning Departments are seeking responses from downtown building owners and sponsors on proposals to convert underused commercial space into housing or other uses. The announcement identifies “office-to-housing” projects as a particular interest, but responses may include conversions of non-residential floor area for other uses.
This is San Francisco’s latest step in an effort to revitalize its downtown in a post Covid-environment where office space is underused while formerly downtown-based employees work from home part-time or full time.
The city recently sponsored a study on how to boost vitality in its financial district. The panel that undertook the study offered recommendations including:
- Creating downtown destination zones through ground-plane activation to help transform public spaces and empty storefronts into city attractions.
- Reducing and restructuring businesses taxes, including the gross receipts tax, commercial rents tax, CEO tax, and transfer tax.
- Providing incentives for office-to-residential conversions to tackle the housing shortage.
- Offering other incentives, such as impact-fee waivers and property tax abatement, as well as reducing zoning and building code barriers to adaptive reuse projects.
City officials are also working on an adaptive reuse roadmap for architects, builders, and developers to adapt projects to current building codes and planned revamped codes.
Related Stories
Multifamily Housing | Sep 10, 2020
COVID-19: How are you doing?
Multifamily seems to be one sector in the construction industry that’s holding its own during the pandemic.
Multifamily Housing | Sep 10, 2020
EV charging webinar to feature experts from Bozzuto, Irvine Company, and RCLCO - Wed., 9-16
EV charging webinar (9/16) to feature Bozzuto Development, The Irvine Company, RCLCO, and ChargePoint
Multifamily Housing | Sep 2, 2020
8 noteworthy multifamily projects to debut in 2020
Brooklyn's latest mega-development, Denizen Bushwick, and Related California’s apartment tower in San Francisco are among the notable multifamily projects to debut in the first half of 2020.
Multifamily Housing | Sep 2, 2020
New affordable housing in the Bronx is designed for both seniors and teens
Body Lawson Associates designed the project.
Giants 400 | Aug 28, 2020
2020 Giants 400 Report: Ranking the nation's largest architecture, engineering, and construction firms
The 2020 Giants 400 Report features more than 130 rankings across 25 building sectors and specialty categories.
Sponsored | | Aug 26, 2020
Healthy air systems have become the new “standard equipment.”
As home buyers demand healthy air systems, builders look to differentiate themselves with a “Healthy Home Builder” designation.
Coronavirus | Aug 25, 2020
Video: 5 building sectors to watch amid COVID-19
RCLCO's Brad Hunter reveals the winners and non-winners of the U.S. real estate market during the coronavirus pandemic.
Multifamily Housing | Aug 24, 2020
Portland’s zoning reform looks to boost the ‘missing middle’ of housing
The city council in Portland, Ore., recently approved the “Residential Infill Project” (RIP), a package of amendments to the city’s zoning code that legalizes up to four homes on nearly any residential lot and sharply limits building sizes.
Multifamily Housing | Aug 24, 2020
Texaco’s century-old headquarters is now a luxury apartment community
After sitting vacant for nearly three decades, the former home of Texaco, Inc. has been converted into a 17-story, 286-unit apartment building in the heart of downtown Houston.
Multifamily Housing | Aug 23, 2020
Designing affordable housing on odd urban lots in LA
"Misfit parcels" could be the key to providing more affordable housing in Los Angeles, say two experienced multifamily housing designers.