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➤ Key Highlights

  • Office-to-apartment conversions reached ~90,300 units in 2026, up 28% YoY.

  • Conversions now make up 47% of all adaptive-reuse projects nationally.

  • NY leads the pipeline (16,358 units), then Washington D.C. (8,479) and Chicago (4,360).

  • Philadelphia, Denver, and St. Louis more than doubled their pipelines YoY.

  • ~$213B of office loan maturities by 2026 are pressuring owners toward exits.

➤ SIGNAL

  • Reuse has crossed from niche to nearly half the adaptive-reuse market.

  • The driver is distress plus policy: ~20% vacancy meets tax breaks and rezoning.

  • Legacy leaders — NY, D.C., Chicago — still dominate, but secondary markets are scaling the playbook fast.

Conversion volume is no longer a story about a few trophy redevelopments. At 47% of all adaptive reuse, office-to-residential is now the mainstream answer to a structural vacancy problem that leasing alone won’t fix.

The geography is widening. The legacy leaders — New York, D.C., Chicago — still dominate raw pipeline, but the doubling in Philadelphia, Denver, and St. Louis shows the playbook spreading to secondary markets where incentives moved first.

The forcing function is the maturity wall. With ~$213B of office debt coming due and vacancy near 20%, owners face a refinance they can’t underwrite — and conversion becomes the cleanest path to value rather than a default.

Conversion feasibility lives in floor-plate depth, window lines, and plumbing risers — not press releases. The deals that pencil are the ones where incentives close a gap that physics and hard costs (still climbing) open. Expect more municipal incentive programs as cities trade office tax base for housing.

➤ TAKEAWAY

Conversion is no longer the exception for dead office — it’s becoming the rule.

Source: CRE Daily / The Real Deal — June 2026

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