Making the Barron building both residential and contemporary museum would be very cool.
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That would be incredible. Hopefully they go with residential instead of office space, but even as office space it's still better than what it is now.Making the Barron building both residential and contemporary museum would be very cool.
293K doesn't seem bad for a space right in the heart of downtown. How big are the units?On the economics side, a lot of things need to line up to repurpose:
- Sierra Place (Artis) $160,000 per suite ($16 million repurpose for 100 suites) - if you can build new for $325,000 per suite, you can see how the economics are challenging as you are renting out inferior space with no balconies. Slate transaction traded at $145 PSF so if we value Sierra's 92,000 SF at that rate, we end up with a land + as-is building cost per unit of $133,400. Add the renovation of $160,000 and you are in for $293,400 per unit. This is the inherent problem with the conversions.
- Harley Court in Edmonton cost of renovation is $226,000 suite ($40 million for 177 suites). You can see how much more difficult this is to pencil. The fact that Strategic has a construction division has no small part in the decision for this to go forward.
@Surrealplaces yes, exactly. One we looked at was in downtown Edmonton, Milner Building. It is an older, Class C-, functionally obsolete 177,000 SF building just south of 104 Street & Jasper. Someone could probably pick it up for ~$7.5 million right now ($42 PSF, leasable). Absurd right? Even on the land it is $199 PSF (about half the price of recent trades, including across the street)....but you need to tear down the building.
Looking at it, I see so much potential to create funky student residences, connected right onto the LRT (don't even have to go outside). Walkable to the farmers market. Great site. But building is so screwed, and core is too fat and building too long to make into even moderately efficient residential. Very interested to see who picks it up and turns it around.
Old warehouses make great loft space, but I think concrete towers in the CBD could still be cool depending on how they're done. The reason I like the idea of using an office tower in the CBD, is mainly because there is such an abundance of office space, and if people could figure out a way to make it work, Calgary could be a hotbed for that kind of market. The other reason being that you can get some nice views.
I wonder why it was easier to convert older warehouses into loft space then it is to do an office building today. I've heard the building code is an issue today, but has the code changed since the 90's, or is it because it's office space rather than warehouse space?