Richard Rubin sees the current spate of empty hotels, motels, retail, and office spaces created by the pandemic as opportunities for adaptive reuse to affordable housing, which is in perennially short supply in many markets in the U.S. and around the world.
Rubin is CEO of Repvblik, a Los Angeles-based company that specializes in such conversions. He and his partner Chris Potterpin of PK Housing Michigan—which is part of a multistate property management company that includes a development and construction division—have several hospitality-to-housing projects in the works in the Midwest, including the conversation of a hotel in Stillwater, Okla., to 141 units of student housing located a mile from Oklahoma State University that should be ready for occupancy this fall.
Plato's Cave is an adaptive reuse of a Days Inn in Branson, Mo. When completed it will have 341 rentable apartments, each of which with a kitchen that was installed by the developer. Images: Repvblik
Repvblik’s most ambitious project to date is the conversion of a 420-key Days Inn within six buildings on 14.5 acres in Branson, Mo., which had been vacant for at least eight years, to Plato’s Cave, which when completed next year will offer 341 rentable apartments. The first phase, with nearly 170 units, opened recently and was renting for between $495 and $695 per month. “Branson is leasing very well,” says Rubin in an interview with BD+C last week.
The hotel rooms were 285 sf. Some of the hotel units were combined into one apartment. Repvblik added kitchens, installed sprinklers in four of the buildings, and built a clubhouse, fitness center, and exterior fencing. Rubin estimates that this project, including the amenities, cost between $15,000 and $20,000 per unit converted, with most of the work being done by the company’s internal construction crews. “It’s a heavy lift, but not as heavy as a greenfield project,” he says.
His financing for the projects in Missouri and Oklahoma is a combination of syndicated equity, construction loans, and permanent debt financing.
TRANSFERRING IDEAS FROM HIS HOMELAND
Rubin, a South African, came to the U.S. in 2015 for a student housing conference in Austin, Texas, and decided to stay. (He was particularly attracted to living in southern California.) In the 10 years before his arrival, Rubin was managing director for AENGUS Property Holdings, a “turnkey” developer focused on urban renewal.
He recalls that in the early 2000s, Johannesburg decentralized its business district, which led to a series of company relocations and vacant high rises. Rubin approached REITs that owned some of those high rises about converting their spaces into affordable rental units, which he started doing in 2004. He says that over the following decade, AENGUS converted “several million square feet” of commercial office space into workforce housing.
After he emigrated to the U.S., it took him a few years to get the lay of the land. He and Potterpin formed Repvblik in 2016-17, and the company initially looked for adaptive reuse opportunities in Detroit. The company is now homed in on the Midwest, where Rubin claims there are “hundreds” of hotels and motels that are either vacant because of the COVID-19 virus, semi occupied, or have been closed for several years.
Aside from the Stillwater and Branson projects, Repvblik has two hotel-to-workforce housing conversions in the works in Michigan, and one in Ohio. He declined to specify which markets in each state.
A common area in Plato's Cave includes a billiards table and fitness center. Image: Repvblik
COMPARED TO OTHER CRES, AFFORDABLE HOUSING IS LOOKING BETTER
Putting on his sales cap, Rubin is convinced that now is the time for investors to jump into affordable housing. The conventional places where they might have parked their money previously, like retail malls or hospitality, have been decimated by the pandemic, and there’s no telling what “recovery” will look like for either.
On the other hand, Rubin states, there’s are always opportunities in affordable housing because “there’s so little of it.” Rubin calls this the “missing middle.” And with unemployment at its highest levels in generations, the need to provide individuals and families with places to live they can afford has rarely been more pressing.
Related Stories
Office Buildings | Sep 28, 2023
Structural engineering solutions for office-to-residential conversion
IMEG's Edwin Dean, Joe Gulden, and Doug Sweeney, share seven key focuses for structural engineers when planning office-to-residential conversions.
Adaptive Reuse | Sep 19, 2023
Transforming shopping malls into 21st century neighborhoods
As we reimagine the antiquated shopping mall, Marc Asnis, AICP, Associate, Perkins&Will, details four first steps to consider.
Adaptive Reuse | Sep 15, 2023
Salt Lake City’s Frank E. Moss U.S. Courthouse will transform into a modern workplace for federal agencies
In downtown Salt Lake City, the Frank E. Moss U.S. Courthouse is being transformed into a modern workplace for about a dozen federal agencies. By providing offices for agencies previously housed elsewhere, the adaptive reuse project is expected to realize an annual savings for the federal government of up to $6 million in lease costs.
Office Buildings | Sep 14, 2023
New York office revamp by Kohn Pedersen Fox features new façade raising occupant comfort, reducing energy use
The modernization of a mid-century Midtown Manhattan office tower features a new façade intended to improve occupant comfort and reduce energy consumption. The building, at 666 Fifth Avenue, was originally designed by Carson & Lundin. First opened in November 1957 when it was considered cutting-edge, the original façade of the 500-foot-tall modernist skyscraper was highly inefficient by today’s energy efficiency standards.
Adaptive Reuse | Sep 13, 2023
Houston's first innovation district is established using adaptive reuse
Gensler's Vince Flickinger shares the firm's adaptive reuse of a Houston, Texas, department store-turned innovation hub.
MFPRO+ Research | Sep 11, 2023
Conversions of multifamily dwellings to ‘mansions’ leading to dwindling affordable stock
Small multifamily homes have historically provided inexpensive housing for renters and buyers, but developers have converted many of them in recent decades into larger, single-family units. This has worsened the affordable housing crisis, say researchers.
Adaptive Reuse | Aug 31, 2023
New York City creates team to accelerate office-to-residential conversions
New York City has a new Office Conversion Accelerator Team that provides a single point of contact within city government to help speed adaptive reuse projects. Projects that create 50 or more housing units from office buildings are eligible for this new program.
Adaptive Reuse | Aug 31, 2023
Small town takes over big box
GBBN associate Claire Shafer, AIA, breaks down the firm's recreational adaptive reuse project for a small Indiana town.
Adaptive Reuse | Aug 17, 2023
How to design for adaptive reuse: Don’t reinvent the wheel
Gresham Smith demonstrates the opportunities of adaptive reuse, specifically reusing empty big-box retail and malls, many of which sit unused or underutilized across the country.
Adaptive Reuse | Aug 16, 2023
One of New York’s largest office-to-residential conversions kicks off soon
One of New York City’s largest office-to-residential conversions will soon be underway in lower Manhattan. 55 Broad Street, which served as the headquarters for Goldman Sachs from 1967 until 1983, will be reborn as a residence with 571 market rate apartments. The 30-story building will offer a wealth of amenities including a private club, wellness and fitness activities.