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Thread: Old buildings

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    Default Old buildings

    Rather than derail the daily photos thread, I thought that I’d post a few pics of a project that we are involved with that is in the due diligence phase. I.e., is it worth purchasing and repurposing, which is always a challenging process. Throw money, engineering, safety, life cycle analysis, energy conservation, hazmat abatement, incentives, rebates and time, together with some history and emotions and there’s a lot happening. Sometimes the projects “pencil” and sometimes they await the trip to the landfill. I find the history of the buildings and their link to both their communities and the country in general, to be fascinating. I’m sure that many of you live in older homes and buildings, so you can appreciate the tales that they can tell. Keeping my fingers crossed on this one…









    rw saunders
    hey, how lucky can one man get.

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    Default Re: Old buildings

    Gosh, that's lovely and yes your passion for what's done but not quite done is shared.
    We used to explore abandoned structures around the DC area. One of my favorites are abandoned brick kilns near the Potomac river. The amazing craftmanship is lost to weeds and vines but not to a discerning eye.
    The IG link below is a keyhole into some of this.
    Last edited by Too Tall; 02-06-2024 at 10:44 AM.

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    Default Re: Old buildings

    When I drive to Truxton, AZ, to teach school, I pass the old Valentine School, built in 1903. It was an Indian Boarding School, not the best of U.S.History. As a historian, I would like to see the school building restored and put in historical context to make sure this sad history is not lost.

    https://www.nps.gov/places/schoolhou...ing-school.htm

    And one day, this will be mine. It was my great-grandmother's bank and it belongs to my mom. There are professional offices and the Chamber of Commerce/Economic Development office downstairs, and the upstairs has four apartments. In 1994, the upstairs was destroyed in a tornado, and rebuilt within a year, so the plumbing, wiring, and roof are only 28 years old.
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    Default Re: Old buildings

    My 2c; unless you have a capital provider comfortable with a higher than usual amount of time/budget risk, or you're located in a place with significant incentives to rehab old buildings, it's increasingly tough to do. I have seen senior housing created from old schools, hospitals, etc and some have come out great but many more have not left the planning stage. We once had one in St Joseph, MO that was a former office building with a grain trading floor on the top floor. One of the residents I met had been a "runner" for the trading operation as a youngster, carting grain samples from the docks of the Mississippi River to the office back and forth.

    New "5 over 1" construction is just too commoditized and safe/easy to underwrite.

    We could all take a cue from England, as there is a whole industry around keeping old buildings upright, modernized, and operational.
    Last edited by robin3mj; 02-06-2024 at 12:00 PM.
    my name is Matt

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    Default Re: Old buildings

    How about Earlshall from the 16th century.

    The gallery is pretty cool.







    https://search.savills.com/property-...bedrseds150173

    or you can do this one from the 15th century and remodeled in 1860.







    https://search.savills.com/property-...bedruedr230004

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    Default Re: Old buildings

    Hey RW - I think you are just the guy to make this happen. I have a feeling the type of building you are involved with as your day job will have put you in touch with some of the granting orgs that will help facilitate the process. Could be wrong, but what a great challenge. Reuse rather than reduce to rubble. And the opportunities to convert what may have become an unhealthy space into a healthy one seems like a tremendous proof-of-concept opportunity for a lot of recent building tech.

    Plus you have the mustache. That'll get you 50% of the way to yes.
    Jorn Ake
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    Default Re: Old buildings

    Quote Originally Posted by rwsaunders View Post
    Rather than derail the daily photos thread, I thought that I’d post a few pics of a project that we are involved with that is in the due diligence phase. I.e., is it worth purchasing and repurposing, which is always a challenging process. Throw money, engineering, safety, life cycle analysis, energy conservation, hazmat abatement, incentives, rebates and time, together with some history and emotions and there’s a lot happening. Sometimes the projects “pencil” and sometimes they await the trip to the landfill. I find the history of the buildings and their link to both their communities and the country in general, to be fascinating. I’m sure that many of you live in older homes and buildings, so you can appreciate the tales that they can tell. Keeping my fingers crossed on this one…


    The aerial view is really neat. It appears to suggest a large-ish sized town, but I was surprised to find that the town, even in its heyday, was only 1/3 the size of Bethlehem. And speaking of neat towns, Bethlehem would be up there. Lots of grand buildings from the turn of the 20th century.

    Also, although I appreciate your kind words, my guesses in that other thread is of the variety of any one of a) through d) responses on a four-answer multiple choice question. Pullman was actually the least expected out of the four, given that I thought it was mostly a Midwest company (whereas a few of the others have significant presence in Pennsylvania).

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    Default Re: Old buildings

    Quote Originally Posted by robin3mj View Post
    My 2c; unless you have a capital provider comfortable with a higher than usual amount of time/budget risk, or you're located in a place with significant incentives to rehab old buildings, it's increasingly tough to do.
    Yes…this project is all about applying specific elements of the state/federal historic tax credit program, as well as the DOE’s recent 48C program, to make it pencil. It doesn’t hurt that the location is dead-on, in terms of where the client wants to be and LEED (green design), wellness, hybrid workplace environment and community engagement are important to them..pretty easy design details to address with an open floor plate, deep floor-to-floor dimensions and lots of natural light.

    The project schedule will also be favorably impacted, as procuring/fabricating/erecting steel for a building this size would be a 5-month journey in itself. If you haven’t experienced the effects of commercial construction escalation, we’re averaging a collective increase of 38.5% nationwide since 2018, so having a “shell” that can be retrofitted certainly helps. Other challenges include the hazmat abatement of course and if they elect to demo the building and start new, we’ll easily have $750K in demolition and removal costs, so it’s a balancing act with emotions thrown in for good measure. The true question is, will the seller agree to the asking price and can this project bring Mike Noble out of retirement?

    https://www.nps.gov/subjects/taxincentives/index.htm

    https://www.energy.gov/infrastructur...it-48c-program
    rw saunders
    hey, how lucky can one man get.

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    Default Re: Old buildings

    Looks like a great building. My dad is currently redeveloping two commercial buildings in Brockton, MA, into housing. One formerly housed Petronelli's Gym, where Marvin Hagler trained. These are both historic tax credit deals. Back in the '70's, he did the first syndication of tax credits generated by a nonprofit development to a for-profit buyer who could use the tax credits.

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    Default Re: Old buildings

    There is an old company store in Thomas WVA circa 1900 that used to be where the miners in Thomas & Davis area bought all their necessities. It was converted into a crafts gallery but I don't think that made it to the other side of the pandemic. The building is statuesque.

    MountainMade Buxton and Landstreet Building at Night by MountainMade WV Handmade Art, on Flickr

    The Davis Coal and Coke building where the miners picked up their pay is across the street. That's been restored but last time we were in Thomas, it didn't appear to have tenants.



    Tough to make a go of things in WVA. Mountain biking is pretty incredible in that area. Canaan Valley is nearby, but like a lot of places, I expect that snowfall hasn't been consistent enough to make dependable money.
    Last edited by j44ke; 02-06-2024 at 08:26 PM.
    Jorn Ake
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    Default Re: Old buildings

    Jorn have you heard about the Mule Barn Tavern at the tip of Sandy Hook? Opened recently. It’s a 125 year old building that was used on the base when the area was one of the two main defense points for Manhattan. The old officers quarters up that way, as well as the ramparts etc are really cool. Worth the bike ride from the base of the park for sure.

    my name is Matt

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    Default Re: Old buildings

    Schenectady couldn't figure out what to do with the Alco plant so they tore it down and redeveloped the area with new construction of shops, condos, hotels, a marina and a casino. It all generates a ton of money for the town but I can't help myself mourning for what was. The building had to be a half mile long, high ceiling and completely open span from one end to the other. I'd have loved to see the inside. I don't believe they even did a photographic record before they demolished it. What's pretty funny is that the previous head of the economic development agency was a dummy and he granted something like a 75 year one dollar lease to a structural steel fabricator so there's all this pretty development with a steel yard and grimy old building right in the middle of it. Not to mention RPI's experimental nuclear reactor.
    Tom Ambros

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    Default Re: Old buildings

    In September of 2022, I attended a history conference at Fargo, ND. I didn't have a car and explored downtown on foot. The Fargo railway station and the surrounding area are being revitalized. At one end of the building is a great bike shop that takes advantage of the restored interior to create a cool vibe throughout. I'd walk around during lunch and pick up a chopped brisket sandwich at BernBaum's before returning to history lectures.

    In 2023, the conference was in Sioux Falls, which also has a revitalized downtown area with great restaurants. This year's conference will be in Sioux Falls again, but I sure miss BernBaum's sandwiches.
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    Default Re: Old buildings

    Quote Originally Posted by bigbill View Post
    In September of 2022, I attended a history conference at Fargo, ND. I didn't have a car and explored downtown on foot. The Fargo railway station and the surrounding area are being revitalized. At one end of the building is a great bike shop that takes advantage of the restored interior to create a cool vibe throughout. I'd walk around during lunch and pick up a chopped brisket sandwich at BernBaum's before returning to history lectures.
    I bought my first road bike there over 20 years ago when it was in a different location and called Island Park Cycles. It's still my dad's go-to place for service.

    Here's a good restoration and repurpose that happened in my neighborhood.

    Before:



    After:







    A friend who did some of the civil engineering for the project said the building itself was simple compared to dealing with the subsurface stuff they found out in the parking lot. Even now, a few years later, they still haven't paved about half of the parking lot.

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    Default Re: Old buildings

    If this building were not sandwiched in between two others, the wrecking ball might have been the preferred tool. It is essentially a ca 1920's millworker's home/shop, that so happens to now be a part of a 30-40's something neighborhood, so it was converted for a local credit union, with community space on the upper floors. We essentially gutted the structure from the inside, stabilized the neighboring walls and started fresh with a new structure, roof, MEP's and some salvaged elements from the former residence. A rarity in the city...5 off street parking stalls in the rear...helped seal the land deal. Common industry quote when dealing with conversions.."they don't build old houses like they used to...thank goodness", as terms like level, plumb and square apparently weren't in the vocabulary back then.
    Last edited by j44ke; 02-07-2024 at 07:25 PM.
    rw saunders
    hey, how lucky can one man get.

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    Default Re: Old buildings

    Sorry for the image size, as Imgur just changed their upload process and it sucks. Jorn, if you can nuke the images in the previous post, I’ll see if I can “right size” them…thanks.
    Last edited by rwsaunders; 02-07-2024 at 02:20 PM.
    rw saunders
    hey, how lucky can one man get.

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    Default Re: Old buildings

    Quote Originally Posted by bigbill View Post
    When I drive to Truxton, AZ, to teach school, I pass the old Valentine School, built in 1903. It was an Indian Boarding School, not the best of U.S.History. As a historian, I would like to see the school building restored and put in historical context to make sure this sad history is not lost.
    St-Eugene in Cranbrook, BC (about 3.5hrs NE of Spokane, WA, or 2.5hrs NW from Whitefish, MN) used to be a residential school. It's now owned by the local Ktunaxa (too-nah-ha) Nation who've developed it into a hotel, golf resort and casino.
    https://www.steugene.ca/

    My wife stayed there one night, but I've only walked through the lobby. I could definitely feel the ghosts within and I'm not sure I'd want to spend the night there, ha.




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    Default Re: Old buildings

    Quote Originally Posted by rwsaunders View Post
    Rather than derail the daily photos thread, I thought that I’d post a few pics of a project that we are involved with that is in the due diligence phase. I.e., is it worth purchasing and repurposing, which is always a challenging process. Throw money, engineering, safety, life cycle analysis, energy conservation, hazmat abatement, incentives, rebates and time, together with some history and emotions and there’s a lot happening. Sometimes the projects “pencil” and sometimes they await the trip to the landfill. I find the history of the buildings and their link to both their communities and the country in general, to be fascinating. I’m sure that many of you live in older homes and buildings, so you can appreciate the tales that they can tell. Keeping my fingers crossed on this one…

    Wow, what a regal old beast. Here's hoping it gets to rehab. Gone are the days when you could put plumbing, electrical, and HVAC on a single sheet!

    Question for you and others replying, have you ever done an embodied carbon analysis for the demo/rebuild vs. renovate question? We're calculating embodied carbon for almost all new buildings, and have done a couple to answer the demo vs. reno question.

    One of the architects I've worked with did this analysis for the last building at Mass MoCa (Museum of Contemporary Art) and the decision was to keep the shell of the old mill building and renovate the gallery space inside. Really, really cool place and a great project.


    https://www.architectmagazine.com/pr...a-building-6_o

    PS Does anybody have the BBcode chops on how to add resizing lingo to the image addresses, such as "?width=600"?
    Trod Harland, Pickle Expediter

    Not everything that is faced can be changed, but nothing can be changed until it is faced. — James Baldwin

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    Default Re: Old buildings

    A question for the knowledgeable, when a former factory or warehouse gets converted into a residential loft, could one trust that the build-up of harmful stuff has been removed as well? Is there even a way for one to test and measure such things?

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    Default Re: Old buildings

    https://www.austincc.edu/news/2022/1...-grande-campus

    We were involved with this historic renovation. From day one was it was a disaster and money pit. What was supposed to have been a simple remodel ended up being basically a complete gutting. Think it ended up being delayed 2 years.

    Recently bid another reno. During the walkthrough, I was chatting with the GC and being pretty blunt with them - my number was gonna be high. And they should follow suit, because anything that could go wrong, likely would.

    As we were getting ready to mobilize for some temporary stuff, it was discovered that the soil under the slab had washed away and the slab was unable to support the new construction.

    Renos are cool, and look great. But holy guacamole can they blow up fast.
    -Dustin

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