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Los Angeles Times
11-08-2025
- Business
- Los Angeles Times
A second act for empty office space? How skyscrapers in downtown L.A. could ease the housing crisis
The transformation of a sleek, granite-clad office tower on the edge of the 110 Freeway into deluxe apartments is about to begin, and developer Garrett Lee thinks the nearly 40-year-old building can be competitive with downtown L.A.'s much newer upmarket housing. A mock-up of an apartment assembled in the L.A. Care tower on 7th Street reveals high ceilings, tall windows and sweeping views of the city that speak to the appeal of urban living. It could also be a harbinger of what's to become of other fancy office towers. With downtown's office rental market mired in high vacancies and falling values, stakeholders are clamoring for more city support to convert high-rises to housing that would help address the city's persistent housing shortage. Among the suggested targets for conversion are elite Financial District towers that commanded top rents before offices were shut down by COVID-19 pandemic stay-at-home orders, leaving many buildings more than one-third vacant. Failure to make at least some of them into housing could be financially catastrophic for taxpayers, according to a new study commissioned by the Central City Assn. of Los Angeles, a downtown business advocacy group that says the city should consider giving developers financial incentives to convert their buildings. Office values have fallen dramatically in recent sales, and many owners are seeking public reappraisals of their buildings in hope of reducing their property taxes. When assessed values of buildings are reduced, so are the taxes collected by the county and shared with the city, school districts and other public entities. 'Declining assessed values are likely to translate into significant losses in General Fund revenue' for the city, according to the report by BAE Urban Economics, a Berkeley real estate consulting firm. Efforts to create a second act for underused office towers that were the height of corporate prestige a generation ago are part of a larger drama playing out in a financial center that has lost much of its shine in the years since the pandemic started. Restaurants and shops have struggled with the departure of many workers while homelessness and a sense that sidewalks aren't safe have risen and helped lead to the departure of some office tenants. Downtown L.A. has 54 office buildings that are at immediate risk of devaluation and could result in nearly $70 billion in lost value over the next 10 years, the report said, creating a potential loss of $353 million in property tax revenues. Buildings potentially would have more value as apartments or condominiums and could make a dent in expected tax losses. Converting just 10 big office buildings to housing would boost their combined assessed property value over a decade by $12 billion, adding $46 million in tax revenue and creating more than 3,800 residential units, the report said. Meanwhile, demand for housing in downtown L.A. has held steady even as the need for offices has waned. Occupancy in apartments has remained about 90% for more than a year, slightly higher than the level before the pandemic. And unlike most neighborhoods in Los Angeles County, downtown has seen a monumental housing construction boom in recent years. In the last decade, 22% of the new housing in the city has been built downtown, where city planning policies encourage dense development, according to the DTLA Alliance business improvement district. To be sure, downtown will retain its identity as a white-collar business center even as its housing component grows. At 56.5 million square feet, downtown is one of the largest office markets in the country and is an important economic engine for the city, said Nella McOsker, president of the Central City Assn. Business leaders in the association will continue to support efforts to refill office buildings with workers, she said, even as they encourage the conversion of some buildings to housing. 'We're not giving up on folks coming into the office in large numbers,' McOsker said, 'but we need to always evolve.' The BAE Urban Economics report does not identify the 10 buildings used to calculate the financial effects of converting them to housing, but previous discussions of prime candidates have included some of the most prominent towers on the city skyline that were built in the latter part of the 20th century. Among them are 777 Tower and Union Bank Plaza, both on Figueroa Street, and Gas Company Tower at the foot of Bunker Hill near Pershing Square. The list of conversion candidates is confidential because publicizing them might 'put a scarlet letter around their neck' when most are 'actually very good office buildings,' said John Adams, a managing principal at Gensler. The architecture firm selected potential candidates for conversion, which have recently faced financial straits and low occupancy. The Gas Company Tower was sold to Los Angeles County last year for about $200 million, a steep drop from its $632-million valuation in 2020. The 777 Tower traded a year ago for $120 million, a 70% drop from its 2013 sale price, according to real estate data provider CoStar. Union Bank Plaza, a 40-story tower completed in 1967, is an attractive candidate in part because it has a retail complex at the base that would be a good amenity for residents as well as office tenants, Adams said. The 55-story 777 Tower, completed in 1991, was designed by architect César Pelli, who designed some of the world's tallest buildings including the Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Part of its appeal is that it has separate banks of elevators for different tiers of floors, Adams said, which could make it easier to convert some floors to housing while others remain offices. With renovations, residents could have a separate lobby entrance from office workers. Many early 20th century office buildings downtown have already been converted to apartments and hotels, but housing advocates are now eyeing the newer generation of towers that dominated the office market in the last three decades. Among them are ripe candidates to become residences, mostly built from the 1970s to 1990s, Adams said. Their 'slick glass-and-marble aesthetic' is visually appealing, he said, and they were built in a way that the outer skins can be modified to include balconies and operable windows. 'These towers are hackable,' Adams said. The city is close to adopting a new building code that will make it easier for developers to get approvals to convert offices built after 1975. A previous code for conversions that focused on buildings erected before that year, when construction standards were less stringent, led to a boom in office, apartment, condo and hotel conversions starting in the early 2000s. Newer buildings such as the L.A. Care tower are 'night and day' more attractive to convert to housing than the midcentury buildings Lee's company, Jamison Properties, has converted in the past, he said. Downtown's Class A buildings have more modern systems such as elevators and electrical service, and may require fewer upgrades to meet seismic standards than older structures. The city recently determined that Jamison Properties did not need to perform a structural retrofit of the L.A. Care tower at 1055 W. 7th St., Lee said. Los Angeles County officials, meanwhile, have declared that Gas Company Tower is seismically safe, but are reviewing bids to perform more than $230 million worth of proactive upgrades 'to ensure that the building performs optimally in the decades ahead,' a representative said. The highest hurdle for private landlords considering turning an office building into apartments or condos is typically financial; it often costs more to acquire and convert a building than can be justified by expected rents. City leaders should consider offering financial incentives such as those found in other cities to bridge the gap to profitability, the report said, citing programs in other central business districts. New York, Washington and Boston have property tax abatement programs, for example. San Francisco offers transfer tax exemptions, and Chicago uses tax-increment financing to encourage some redevelopments. In Canada, Calgary offers direct grants. The Central City Assn. wants the city to consider financial incentives for conversions, even though it is experiencing budget shortfalls, McOsker said. As of May, the city faced a nearly $1-billion budget shortfall. McOsker suggested that the city form a team to focus on conversions and perhaps do it at a scale 'well outside of downtown Los Angeles.' Helping turn unused offices into housing is important to city officials, said Rachel Freeman, deputy mayor of business and economic development. 'We have a deep need for more housing at all levels of affordability,' she said. 'Adaptive reuse has the potential to be a tool to help achieve our goals towards housing production and also the revitalization of our core urban centers.' Zoning and building codes should be 'more supportive' of the process, she said, adding that the mayor's office also is open to the idea of financial incentives for builders. For the vibrancy of downtown and other core business centers also facing falling office values, Freeman said, 'there is a cost to doing nothing.'


Los Angeles Times
24-07-2025
- Business
- Los Angeles Times
Group seeks to repeal L.A.'s $800-million business tax, citing ‘anti-job climate'
A group of business leaders submitted paperwork on Wednesday for a ballot measure that would repeal Los Angeles' gross receipts tax, delivering some financial relief to local employers but also punching an $800-million hole in the city budget. The proposed measure, called the 'Los Angeles Cost of Living Relief Initiative,' would strip away a tax imposed on a vast array of businesses: entertainment companies, child care providers, law firms, accountants, health care businesses, nightclubs, delivery companies and many others, according to the group that submitted it. Backers said that repealing a tax long reviled by the business community would help address the city's economic woes, creating jobs, allowing businesses to stay in the city and making the economy 'more affordable for all Angelenos.' 'This initiative is the result of the business community uniting to fight the anti-job climate at City Hall,' said Nella McOsker, president and CEO of the Central City Assn., a downtown-based business group. McOsker, one of five business leaders who signed the ballot proposal, said city officials have 'ignored the pleas of small- and medium-sized businesses for years.' As a result, scores of restaurants and other establishments, including the Mayan Theater, are closing, she said. The filing of the ballot proposal immediately set off alarms at City Hall, where officials recently signed off on a plan to lay off hundreds of city workers in an attempt to balance this year's budget. The city's business tax generates more than $800 million annually for the general fund — the part of the budget that pays for police patrols, firefighters, paramedic response and other core services. 'Public safety is almost exclusively paid for by the general fund,' said City Administrative Officer Matt Szabo, in an email to The Times. 'This measure is an assault on public safety. Proponents of this measure will be directly responsible for cutting police or fire staffing in half if it passes.' McOsker, asked about L.A.'s financial woes, said the city had a $1-billion shortfall this year and still succeeded in balancing the budget. She is the daughter of City Councilmember Tim McOsker, who sits on the five-member budget committee. The proposed measure is backed by executives and board members with various groups, including the Los Angeles Area Chamber of Commerce, the Greater San Fernando Valley Chamber of Commerce and VICA, the Valley Industry and Commerce Assn. VICA president Stuart Waldman said the city's economy has faltered amid a spate of increased taxes, higher city fees and new regulations. The most recent, he said, is the ordinance hiking the minimum wage for hotel employees and workers at Los Angeles International Airport to $30 per hour by 2028, which was approved by the City Council over objections from business leaders. 'We're usually playing defense,' said Waldman, who also signed the ballot proposal. 'We've decided the time has come to play offense.' The business tax proposal is part of a larger ballot battle being waged this year between businesses and organized labor. Last month, a group of airlines and hotel industry organizations turned in about 140,000 signatures for a proposed ballot measure aimed at overturning the newly approved hotel and LAX minimum wage. L.A. County election officials are currently verifying those signatures. Unite Here Local 11, which represents hotel employees, responded with its own package of counter measures. One would require a citywide election on the construction or expansion of hotels, sports stadiums, concert halls and other venues. Another would hike the minimum wage for all workers in the city, raising it to the level of hotel and airport employees. Two other measures from Unite Here take aim at companies that pay their CEOs more than a hundred times their median employee in L.A., either by forcing them to pay higher business taxes or by placing limitations on their use of city property. The ongoing ballot battle is 'escalating in ways that are reckless and disconnected from the real work of running a city,' said Councilmember Katy Yaroslavsky, who heads the council's budget committee. Yaroslavsky, in a statement, said the fight is 'unproductive and needs to stop.' 'We just closed a billion-dollar budget gap, and basic services are already severely strained,' she said. 'You don't fix that by removing one of our largest revenue sources with no plan to replace it. We have to fix what is broken and that requires working together to offer real solutions.' Josue Marcus, spokesperson for the Los Angeles City Clerk, said proponents of the latest ballot measure would need to gather about 140,000 valid signatures for it to qualify. The next city election is in June 2026. McOsker, for her part, said she believes that state law sets a lower threshold — only 44,000 — for measures that result in the elimination of taxes. Industry leaders have long decried L.A.'s business tax, which is levied not on profits but on the gross receipts that are brought in — even where an enterprise suffers financial losses. Former Mayor Eric Garcetti argued for eliminating the tax more than a decade ago, saying it puts the city's economy at a competitive disadvantage. Once in office, he only managed to scale it back, amid concerns that an outright repeal would trigger cuts to city services. Organizers of the latest proposal said it would not rescind business taxes on the sale of cannabis or medical marijuana, which were separately approved by voters.