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Posts Tagged ‘residential’

Photo: Valerie Plesch/NPR.
The Washington Monument is seen from the sky lounge of the rooftop penthouse at Accolade, a former office building.

In Boston for a long time, builders of office buildings and politicians thought it was brilliant to build out some undeveloped low land called the Seaport District, or Innovation District. Environmental voices weren’t loud enough to compete with that sort of unity, never mind the tendency of that part of the city to flood. (See the movie Inundation District,)

Then came Covid.

Companies stopped relying on office buildings. Even after the intense days of the pandemic, both workers and their employers saw benefits in allowing employees to work at home.

‘There’s a concept in the industry called ‘extend and pretend.’ 

The question became, what can we do with those empty buildings?

Eleana Tworek and Jacob Fenston reported recently at National Public Radio about a growing trend to convert the buildings to housing, which unlike office space, is badly needed.

“The room looks like your typical office suite,” they write, “white walls, low ceilings, gray carpet worn thin from years of foot traffic. But for this vacant office outside Dupont Circle in Washington, D.C., real estate developers see potential.

“Matt Pestronk is the president of Post Brothers, a development company that bought the entire office building back in 2021, along with a neighboring building. Instead of making updates to attract new business tenants, Post Brothers decided to convert the old offices into more than 500 apartments.

“  ‘This location is a little bit off the beaten track for major office tenants, and it’s an incredible residential neighborhood,’ Pestronk says. …

“Cities across the U.S. are grappling with two parallel problems: too much empty office space and not enough housing. Nationally, office vacancy rates reached roughly 20% in 2024, after years of employees working from home. At the same time, the national housing shortage is in the millions. …

“Post Brothers has completed half a dozen office-to-residential conversions so far. Its project in D.C., which broke ground last month, is the largest such conversion in the city to date.

“Pestronk says the overall structure of the buildings will remain the same, but with some major additions. A lighter-colored limestone-like aggregate facade will replace the gray concrete from the 1960s, and old inefficient windows will be replaced by larger ones that let in more light per unit. …

“  ‘One of the advantages of doing conversions is that we don’t have to dig a hole for a foundation because there’s already one,’ he says.

“Plans for the completed building include luxury amenities such as a pool and a dog park. Projected rent for a one-bedroom apartment is around $4,000 per month, but 60 units will be set aside as affordable housing. …

“Tracy Loh, a fellow at the Brookings Institution who studies adaptive reuse of old buildings, says the scale of the shortage far outpaces what conversions can provide.

” ‘Office-to-residential conversion is not going to solve the housing crisis,’ she says. But she argues that these projects still matter.

” ‘ It does kill two birds with one stone, in terms of providing some housing supply,’ Loh says. And it tends to create housing in central, transit-accessible areas that are in high demand. …

“Loh says this downturn is unlike past office slumps and warns developers against relying on old cyclical patterns to continue.

” ‘There’s a concept in the industry called “extend and pretend,” ‘ she says. ‘In times past when there’s been a glut of supply in office space, it has gradually resolved itself over time with new growth and new demand.’

“This slump in office demand is likely to persist, though. In our digital age, office storage is less essential because files live on our computers. So even when workers are coming into the office, employers need less space per employee.

“D.C. leaders are responding to that shift. Since 2024, the city has completed 11 office conversions, creating nearly 2,000 new apartments. Mayor Muriel Bowser has made adaptive reuse a focus of her administration, offering incentives such as a 20-year property tax abatement to encourage developers to move forward.

“Today, D.C. has the second-largest number of planned office-to-residential conversions in the country, just behind New York City. But it’s a trend that’s gaining popularity more broadly, in cities from Dallas to Manchester, New Hampshire.”

More at NPR, here.

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Photo: Leong Leong.
Leong Leong’s Ray Fishtown in Philadelphia is meant to surround residents with art. A Russian philanthropist is collaborating on the project.

I thought this article about including original art and artists’ studios in residential buildings was interesting. I confess, however, that the extreme wealth of the young Russian woman who is behind the concept makes me uncomfortable. She’s the daughter of an oligarch, and it’s hard for me to believe anyone makes a fortune in Russia without workers suffering. Of course, we also have guys like that.

As Taylor Dafoe reported at Artnet News, “Russian collector Dasha Zhukova, who founded Moscow’s Garage Museum of Contemporary Art, has launched a new real-estate venture with the aim of bringing residential apartments, art studios, and exhibition spaces together under one roof.

“Ray, as Zhukova’s new business is called, already has two major developments underway, in Manhattan and Philadelphia. Its website describes them as ‘vertical villages’ and notes that prices will be ‘accessible.’ …

“Mexico City-based architect Frida Escobedo, who in 2018 became the youngest architect ever commissioned to build London’s Serpentine Pavilion, will lead the design of the 21-story development Ray Harlem.

“The building’s first four floors will serve as the new home of Harlem’s historic National Black Theatre, founded in 1968 by Barbara Ann Teer, and will include spaces for performance, events, and retail. The rest of the building will feature 222 apartments, artist studios, co-working spaces, as well as communal kitchens and libraries. …

“Ray Fishtown, a 110-unit building in Philadelphia designed by the architecture firm Leong Leong, is under construction now and boasts a similar slate of amenities, including a half-dozen street-level artist studios. New York artist Rashid Johnson will create a living greenhouse in the building’s lobby while Philadelphia-based artist Michelle Lopez will add a text-based intervention on the split brick facade. Lopez will also work out of a studio at the development and become its inaugural artist in residence when it opens. …

“Designer Suzanne Demisch, who’s been recruited by Ray to work on the upcoming projects, tells Artnet News that the firm will look to work with ’emerging and established artists, designers, and architects’ who are ‘local’ and ‘forward-thinking.’

“Demisch, who’s worked with Zhukova on various projects for a decade, says the philanthropist first articulated her vision for Ray five or six years ago. … ‘She asked me if I would join her in defying the traditional boundaries of architecture and design in the residential field and [creating] more equitable access to the built spaces of the future.’  

“Zhukova seems to have taken some inspiration for Ray from the Garage Museum building, which was designed by Rem Koolhaas and has proved to be as big a draw as the programming inside, Zhukova told the Wall Street Journal. … 

“ ‘Even if [visitors] had seen all the shows that we had on, they would just stay and hang out in our lobby,’ she said. ‘They would hang out in our cafe for hours on end—just come back day after day because they wanted to be in that environment.’ 

“Each of Ray’s developments will offer its future inhabitants a grip of perks calibrated to the creative culture of their respective cities and neighborhoods, including workshops with local artists and live events sponsored by nearby arts organizations.”

More at Artnet, here, and at Ray Fishtown, here. The pandemic undoubtedly slowed the Ray timeline, but I’m going to keep an eye on it and see how it turns out. I’m especially curious how they plan to deliver the “equitable” aspect as I feel sure they’ll be able to get high-paying buyers with a concept like that.

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