Originally Posted by
bombermwc
I dont think i'm underestimating it at all. But we have to face facts. This buildingg it NEVER going to be purchased to gut the entire thing all at once. It's going to be so cost prohibitive to do that, and the ROI is so extremely long term, that no investor is going to stick with it that long.
Yes, construction is dirty. And doing it a floor at a time can make it take longer. But that's sort of the point. Do it a little a a time and you minimize your upfront cost and can spread the capitalization across several year's worth of books. There are accounting reasons that help with that as well. But if you look at the building in a post Devon world, you already see large swaths of space that are unoccupied.
So what i'm saying is, take those now vacant areas and re-tool them. It's incredibly easy to have an entire floor empty in the tower since the floors are so small (for commercial). Yes it would be ideal for them to get commercial back in, but it's class C space and small business don't typically take up space at the high dollars it goes for being downtown. If they did, the place would be full so that's a wasted argument.
You see this done in suburban office space every day. Suites are torn out and rebuilt for the new tenant. It's not really that big of a deal. Commercial construction moves really fast, and the walls between suites get soundproofing so you don't really hear that much. And being residential, it's going to have even more soundproofing between the spaces. And if you hear it between floors, it will be minimal.
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