Dr. StrangeHat
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- Sep 13, 2012
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The economics of development make it challenging and somewhat cost-prohibitive to build below-market-rate housing without subsidies to maintain desired ROI, especially given rising construction costs. The good thing about hotels is that they can be converted to housing, but that won’t happen as long as occupancy rates continue to hold despite the influx of hotel rooms. If the occupancy rate ever drops below a certain level, then building owners will likely begin to convert to housing. I just don’t see that happening anytime soon.
Unless the city sets a cap on hotel rooms in the city, increases the fee in lieu of housing and/or ties the fee to the number of rooms across the city in aggregate (e.g. fee continues to go up as more hotel rooms are added), then I’m not sure there are workable solutions other than the city getting more involved in housing development financing.
Unless the city sets a cap on hotel rooms in the city, increases the fee in lieu of housing and/or ties the fee to the number of rooms across the city in aggregate (e.g. fee continues to go up as more hotel rooms are added), then I’m not sure there are workable solutions other than the city getting more involved in housing development financing.
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