Adaptive Reuse

Finding opportunity in our vacant built assets

Items Tagged ‘opportunity’

Essay: Can Historic Preservation Help Lead Us Out of the Recession

Publication Date:
September 28, 2009
Written By:
James T. Kienle, FAIA
Source:
Contract Magazine



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Synopsis:

Kienle discusses a great opportunity for our cities and towns during this recession – historic preservation and adaptive reuse. The housing and construction bust has shown us that we can not endlessly develop new buildings. Couple this with the exorbitant amount of virgin materials that new construction requires and you have a recipe to reevaluate “development.” This perfect storm has opened up the developer, architectural, and construction fields to reconsider old, vacant buildings. Kienle suggests that there is great economic potential by focusing on adaptive reuse. “Studies show that dollar for dollar, historic preservation is one of the highest job-generating economic development options as illustrated in the 2005 presentation “The Economics of Historic Preservation” by Don Rypkema.”

Doing The Numbers

Publication Date:
March 3, 2010
Written By:
Theo Douglas
Source:
The District Weekly



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Synopsis:

An open house and panel discussion was hosted at the adapted 4th+Linden buildings in Long Beach, California. The focus of the event – the success of adaptive reuse. A number of architects, developers and real-estate industry professionals attended in order to learn more about how the development of the host building site was able to succeed in light of the current economic situation. One of the main reasons the project stayed in the black was that construction costs stayed under $1 million. This was due in large part to the fact that the developer reused the building rather than tearing it down. Another ingredient for its success was the swift turnaround. As the developer was able to work with an existing building, it was faster for them to complete the conversion, sell it, and get a tenant than it would have been to tear down, permit and title, rebuild, sell, and gain tenants. Five of the eight units in the building have already been sold. Project developer Brad Gwinn, and the evening’s moderator, noted that a mix of low rent, cost per square foot, and Long Beach’s support of adaptive reuse could help the community through the recession. The key statement – “Now is the time to create opportunity,” Gwinn said, “it’s finding the incentives, working with the tools.” One of those tools is adaptive reuse.

Redrawing the American City

Publication Date:
December 1, 2009
Written By:
Laura Wright
Source:
OnEarth



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Synopsis:

In the wake of global warming, many are starting to see the value and need for Smart Growth. But as Ms. Wright points out, this is not just about developing more compact new developments, but looking at what we already have. A number of cities have suffered flight and disinvestment. The important thing now is to see the urban blight as an asset. We should reuse the old neighborhoods, buildings and infrastructure. It will save open space from being built on as well as utilize elements that have already had time, energy and resources spent on them. It’s important to “begin with the stuff you’ve already got.”