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San Francisco voters approve tax break for office-to-residential conversions

Adaptive Reuse

San Francisco voters approve tax break for office-to-residential conversions

The move is aimed at easing the city’s housing crisis and reviving the downtown.


By Peter Fabris, Contributing Editor | March 15, 2024
Image by Jason from Pixabay

Image by Jason from Pixabay

San Francisco voters recently approved a ballot measure to offer tax breaks to developers who convert commercial buildings to residential use.

The tax break applies to conversions of up to 5 million sf of commercial space through 2030. San Francisco’s office vacancy rate hit a record 36% in December, and it is expected to increase this year.

The initiative is intended to help transform the city’s downtown from a 9-to-5 business district to a 24-hour mixed-use neighborhood. San Francisco’s downtown has a higher-than-average stock of commercial buildings that are suitable for residential conversions. According to a report by Gensler, 40% of the city’s downtown buildings evaluated would be suitable for conversion. That compares to about 20% of buildings in a typical U.S. city.

San Francisco’s stringent planning standards and its building codes, as well as high construction costs, make office-to-residential conversions a heavy lift, though.

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Adaptive Reuse

Empty mall to be converted to UCLA Research Park

UCLA recently acquired a former mall that it will convert into the UCLA Research Park that will house the California Institute for Immunology and Immunotherapy at UCLA and the UCLA Center for Quantum Science and Engineering, as well as programs across other disciplines. The 700,000-sf property, formerly the Westside Pavilion shopping mall, is two miles from the university’s main Westwood campus. Google, which previously leased part of the property, helped enable and support UCLA’s acquisition.

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