All fair points, but...It's probably not a question of not wanting to do it, but more of a question of finding a residential partner willing to take on the project. IQHQ is a life science developer right? Presumably they would need to find a residential developer that is willing to take on the existing debt of the project as well as making the residential pencil. If they are only "putting the project on hold" it means they can float the project for the time being, so the only reason they would hand it off to another developer would be if said developer took the entire liability off their hands. There doesn't appear to be an incentive for IQHQ to offload the project and I'm willing to bet there is not a residential project that could make the entire liability pencil at the moment.
Just my 2 cents: I think this pattern of overinvestment has been seen with pretty much every example of a market with booming demand right (canals and railroads in the 1850s, dotcoms and telecoms in the 90s/2000s, pre-great recession housing, the current Chinese real estate situation, probably AI now lol, etc.). All of the above bankrupted a lot of people lol so at the very least lab builders are no stupider than investors in general. I think I remember reading some economists arguing that tending towards overinvestment is game theoretically optimal for individual firms even if a coordinated supply and pricing would be beneficial. Calling the top of any market is incredibly difficult and even if you were right but you missed it by a few years, you will have paid very large opportunity costs. Missing a real boom would obviously also be bad news, economic history is littered with firms that missed the bus. I think the fact that there are so many booms and busts is evidence that this decision is a lot harder than it seems.I still don't understand how seemingly nobody at all of these companies, investing at minimum hundreds of millions of dollars per project, ever took a look at all of the Lab Space being proposed and said, "Perhaps this current market is a bit oversaturated?"
Obviously the outcome of the 2024 election and the subsequent hatcheting of science funding wasn't on the radar when these projects were first being proposed but the fact that vacancy rates were rising before this year shows that this would have happened anyway.
Telling us what we already know:
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Near Fenway Park, a deck over the Pike is nearly done. But that’s all they’ll build for now. - The Boston Globe
Developer IQHQ says it will put the $1 billion project on hold until the life science real estate market improves.www.bostonglobe.com
I don't know why this is so hard...r-e-s-i-d-e-n-t-i-a-l c-o-n-v-e-r-s-i-o-n
You seem to assume I was directing my-why-is-it-so-hard comment at any one person or entity (e.g., the developer)...It's hard because the mayor has made building residential completely infeasible in Boston. There is no way someone could build a residential tower here with 20% affordable units, net zero emissions, at the current interest rates. The revenue from the market units is not enough to pay the construction loan and the required return to lenders. If someone could do it, someone would do it. It's just math. So now we'll have an empty building site until someone can build commercial or lab because those are the only chances of something penciling out.
We're on a forum that has pages of residential development projects started in Boston under this Mayor...It's hard because the mayor has made building residential completely infeasible in Boston. There is no way someone could build a residential tower here with 20% affordable units, net zero emissions, at the current interest rates. The revenue from the market units is not enough to pay the construction loan and the required return to lenders. If someone could do it, someone would do it. It's just math. So now we'll have an empty building site until someone can build commercial or lab because those are the only chances of something penciling out.
a) I don't disagree with the delusion, but this is a super high visible site that the developer probably believes would pay dividends down the road. When the rebound ultimately comes around, they probably feel like the location will prove fruitful. At least that is the logic I see.All fair points, but...
a) I think there may be some delusion in their assessment of how soon the market will rebound enough for this...this is not your typical downturn cycle; there are millions of vacant new-build square feet of prime lab space ahead of them in drawing top life science tenants
and,
b) It's not like they're just sitting on a piece of land. They're sitting on a massive amount of non-rent-earning sunk cost. You'd think they may need to settle for a less than ideal off ramp out of necessity (do they really have the wherewithal to keep carrying this debt for an extended period)?
and,
c) Samuels & Associates (to the rescue?)
I'd like to push back just a little on how restrictive the market challenges are. While it has undoubtedly caused a major slowdown in residential construction, the results of that have been very different in different places. Even with interest rates at their current highs, other cities are building 50% (Washington DC) to 150% (Portland ME) of what Boston does without dramatically different fundamentals. Houston was included just to show what the upper end of what is possible with permissible land use regulations and sprawl. And while many other regions are building notably numbers of SFH while Boston is not, feel free to dig into the data source (link below) more and you'll see that only explains some of the gap.I think this conversation is pointing out the many complexities that go into building in our city (really building in general). Residential is one of the hardest to build because the margins are so tight to begin with. Factoring tight margins with things like interest rates, construction costs, absolute need for affordability, complexities of land deals (ie ground leases/air rights). On top of all that is the most important item, who is holding all the risk. Residential should have the lowest bar to clear in terms of gaining approval, but face some of the biggest pushback from neighborhoods and jurisdictions. But even if the approval bar was lower does that fully overcome all of the market challenges, probably not. Its got to be a combination of municipal changes as well as market changes and getting those to work in lockstep is apparently very hard.
Theres one piece that that website fails to account for, which is that single family construction is often actually substantially cheaper and easier to build - its substantially less complex to build a subdivision full of cookie cutter townhouses and SFHs than any multifamily development. At the same time, its an in demand housing typology, with often the best ROI for homebuilders. DR Horton, one of the biggest publicly listed home builders, reports an homebuilding overall margin of 21.5%. Thats massive compared to the much thinner returns on much multifamily construction, and why IZ can make the financial case untenable. Just filtering to the same 6 MSAs, If you look at the source data, the vast majority of all housing production in Houston is SFH, but here in the Boston MSA we have the highest ratio of ≥5 units to SFH - 1.6:1. We want density, and not sprawl.I'd like to push back just a little on how restrictive the market challenges are. While it has undoubtedly caused a major slowdown in residential construction, the results of that have been very different in different places. Even with interest rates at their current highs, other cities are building 50% (Washington DC) to 150% (Portland ME) of what Boston does without dramatically different fundamentals. Houston was included just to show what the upper end of what is possible with permissible land use regulations and sprawl. And while many other regions are building notably numbers of SFH while Boston is not, feel free to dig into the data source (link below) more and you'll see that only explains some of the gap.
All of this is to say that while financing has made it harder to build, it has made it harder to build everywhere but that isn't stopping other places. If regulations were changed so Boston built more like Portland and less like San Francisco, we could conceivably see an increase in development. Interest rates are a convenient scapegoat, but the when looking at the whole picture, it's clear they aren't the main problem.
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From https://housingdata.app/
We're on a forum that has pages of residential development projects started in Boston under this Mayor...
I'll just add:Theres one piece that that website fails to account for, which is that single family construction is often actually substantially cheaper and easier to build - its substantially less complex to build a subdivision full of cookie cutter townhouses and SFHs than any multifamily development. At the same time, its an in demand housing typology, with often the best ROI for homebuilders. DR Horton, one of the biggest publicly listed home builders, reports an homebuilding overall margin of 21.5%. Thats massive compared to the much thinner returns on much multifamily construction, and why IZ can make the financial case untenable. Just filtering to the same 6 MSAs, If you look at the source data, the vast majority of all housing production in Houston is SFH, but here in the Boston MSA we have the highest ratio of ≥5 units to SFH - 1.6:1. We want density, and not sprawl.
View attachment 68808
Fair point. In any case, I think that this particular site is probably high-profile enough that if Samuels or someone else came to the Mayor with a proposal for a lot of homes and some measure of plaza on the deck, they'd be likelier to get a pizza party than a slammed door.The new Inclusionary Zoning requirements that Suffolk is complaining about did not take effect until October 2024, so any project that has started construction likely did not fall under the newer requirements but the more permissive IZ requirements last tinkered with under the Walsh administration. There are even projects still pending city approvals grandfathered under the old IZ requirements.
But if history is any guide, the new IZ requirements will result in more income-restricted housing units, but fewer approved housing units overall. I’d argue that this is not a happy outcome, particularly since Boston was not a picnic to build in previously.
Boston can likely get away with increasing IZ requirements, but it should be pared with broader zoning/regulatory reforms:
* Eliminate minimum parking requirements, like Cambridge, Somerville, and even now Salem. Boston just killed a housing development blocks away from a Red Line station because it did not have enough parking.
* Eliminate single-family zoning as Cambridge has.
* For the love of God, simplify the zoning and speed up review times for housing proposals.
Without these broader reforms, the new IZ requirements alone will increase the cost to build housing projects and reduce the overall amount of housing produced.