Posted Jul 19, 2024, 11:06 PM
|
|
Registered User
|
|
Join Date: Nov 2008
Posts: 582
|
|
Economically this is pretty interesting. The cost to demolish a tall building in the middle of a city must be enormous, which implies that the value of the building is at least as far in the negative as the total cost of the demolition. That is - if it costs $50 million to demolish, it implies that the building is so difficult to sell that they couldn't *pay* someone $49 million to take it off their hands.
This calculation is complicated sightly by the fact that, perhaps, the owner of the building also owns the land underneath it and would be left with that potentially valuable re-developable real estate, but even then buildings and the land underneath them are frequently sold and held separately (at least in New York).
Either way, in my example it implies that owning *the building* is worth -$50 million dollars or worse once the cost of maintenance, property taxes, etc are calculated and discounted against whatever potential revenue can be made off it.
Naively, this all seems hard to truly believe, but if multiple companies are making this same decision, then that must be the economic reality of it.
|