Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I've never understood why landlords do this; presumably there is benefit they get from letting these storefronts sit empty than from lowering the rent to at least get something, but I'm not sure what it is (maybe a tax loss thing?). Seems like something the city should take action to combat.
Commercial real estate is valued at some multiple of annual rent. I forgot the exact figure since I'm not in this space. But that is unlike how residential real estate is valued
So a landlord could value a property at X based on current rent. However if he lowers the rent he will immediately lower the value of the property. The mortgages on these properties are also for much shorter terms than the 30 year for residential. So you can see how lowering rents could quickly escalate to them losing the property
Anonymous wrote:I'm glad I own a modest row house in DC because I need to know that I'll always be able to afford the property taxes. I think a decade from now the people who own the Milion+ homes are going to feel the pain of property taxes like NY and NJ.
Anonymous wrote:I've never understood why landlords do this; presumably there is benefit they get from letting these storefronts sit empty than from lowering the rent to at least get something, but I'm not sure what it is (maybe a tax loss thing?). Seems like something the city should take action to combat.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Out: storefronts and bricks and mortar stores
In: high density urban living and restaurants / eateries
Yes! They need to turn this vacant office space into housing ASAP. People would gladly live downtown and then some of the shops/restaurants/life will come back.
There is no "ASAP" with what you propose. Any meaningful residential conversions will take decades. In the case of most office buildings, it would be more cost-effective to tear them down and build residential in its place. You can't just snap your fingers and convert an office building into apartments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Out: storefronts and bricks and mortar stores
In: high density urban living and restaurants / eateries
Yes! They need to turn this vacant office space into housing ASAP. People would gladly live downtown and then some of the shops/restaurants/life will come back.
There is no "ASAP" with what you propose. Any meaningful residential conversions will take decades. In the case of most office buildings, it would be more cost-effective to tear them down and build residential in its place. You can't just snap your fingers and convert an office building into apartments.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Out: storefronts and bricks and mortar stores
In: high density urban living and restaurants / eateries
Out: high density urban living where the last pandemic spread like crazy and the next one will too.
In: living exurban or rural on a big piece of property and working from home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Out: storefronts and bricks and mortar stores
In: high density urban living and restaurants / eateries
Yes! They need to turn this vacant office space into housing ASAP. People would gladly live downtown and then some of the shops/restaurants/life will come back.
Anonymous wrote:The tax situation in DC is going to become dire. CRE is the foundation of the services we have come to expect.