> QUERY: "Developer feasibility study for Class B Office to Residential Condo conversion. Focus: Zoning, Logistics, 2028 Cost Projection, Red Tape, and Legal Risk."
Agent mined Seattle Municipal Code Title 23 and the 2025 "Office-to-Housing" Ordinance (CB 120937).
> THE DEEP FLOOR PLATE PROBLEM: Typical 1980s office towers have 40,000 sq ft floor plates. Residential code requires every bedroom to have a window.
> SOLUTION: The "Donut" Strategy. We must diamond-saw a 30' x 40' Atrium Light Court through the center of the post-tensioned slab.
> PLUMBING: Office slabs are post-tensioned concrete (cables inside). You cannot drill random holes for toilets. Requirement: Raised floors (6") in bathrooms to run horizontal waste lines to the existing commercial wet stacks.
> BASELINE DATA: Q1 2025 Hard Costs for Seattle High-Rise Reno: ~$285/SF.
> ESCALATION FACTOR: 3.5% Compounded Annually (Labor unions + Material tariffs).
| YEAR | PROJ. COST ($/GSF) | MARKET CONTEXT |
|---|---|---|
| 2025 (Current) | $285.00 | High labor availability (Office const. halted) |
| 2026 | $294.97 | New energy code enforcement begins |
| 2027 | $305.29 | Supply chain squeeze (Glass/Copper) |
| 2028 (Target) | $316.00 | Vacancy expected to stabilize at 18% |
> THE "POISON PILL": Washington State's Condo Act (WUCIOA) creates "Implied Warranties" of quality that last for 4 years post-sale.
> THE RISK: Plaintiff attorneys frequently sue developers for "Construction Defects" (e.g., a scratch on a window or a noisy pipe) just before the 4-year statute expires. This makes Wrap-Around Insurance cost 3-5% of the total project value.
> DOES THE PRO FORMA PENCIL OUT?
[ DOWNLOAD PRO FORMA.XLS ]