Spyke
aboringdystopia·A Boring DystopiabyM0oP0o

Three millennials buy abandoned high school, convert it into 31-unit housing

The project is maybe not the worst idea, the $1400 rent a month though....

Oh and this was not the first plan:

“We were thinking of turning it into a WeWork space, a concert hall, a beer garden. We had no shortage of ideas on what to do with the space,”

Three millennials buy abandoned high school, convert it into 31-unit housinghttps://www.goodgoodgood.co/articles/abandoned-high-school-housing-renovationOpen linkView original on mander.xyz
midwest.social

I'd have loved to see them make them low income affordable.

50
M0oP0oreply
mander.xyz

The whole story is oddly frustrating. The average rent in the area is $1189 FYI.

49
lemmy.world

Yeah, but they're also 150-200 more sq feet, with 12 feet ceilings and newly renovated...

Average rent includes shitty run down ones as well, which these days are most apartments.

The other community this was posted to was a "good news" community even.

This just doesn't really feel dystopian

30
M0oP0oreply
mander.xyz

The literal only other time I have seen a school turned into apartments was for subsidized housing, they needed to all but gut the inside of the building to make it work. This was not done here, these are class rooms with extra plumbing.

The overlap of the good news posts and dystopian posts have always been oddly large.

14
lemmy.world

Your article says they had trees growing inside the building...

And that they worked with a parks department to maintain the original look.

So ironically, them trying to maintain the history is why you think they're overcharging.

6
M0oP0oreply
mander.xyz

They wanted to make it a "we work" at first, its not the overcharging that is the issue. The issue (at least for me) is turning every thing into a business venture. This was once a public building for teaching kids and was bought on the cheap to turn into another trendy revenue source.

0
lowEndLittreply
lemmy.world

I wanted to disagree with you at first, because I love the idea of repurposing old structures instead of building yet another soulless, "modern" apartment building, but yeah, they're clearly doing this with the intent of turning a profit when it could have been another example of non-market housing, where the cost of rent simply covers the cost of building maintenance and actually helps to stabilize rent costs in an area.

TL;DR: Once again, a cool thing is made less cool by the profit motive.

2

Maybe that is why I got a "dystopia" feel from this more then anything, its almost a cool thing. I would be I think much more willing to go along with this if it was not put up as a "feel good" story that to me has very little good. I get more "we work" style hipster scam then a long term usable housing solution.

1

That's only a hundred bucks more than my studio that's in a bad neighborhood with drugged up neighbors that have not once, not twice, but three times hit the hood of my car with what looks like a metal bat or crowbar. I'll take an old school any day.

The good thing is I don't care about cosmetic damage and I have insurance, but it's the principle of the matter.

4

it's pretty rare you get a developer who wants to enter the housing market at 'affordable.' more housing is good, people who can afford it will move to them if they're fairly priced, putting their older units on the market. if they're unfairly priced then the price will come down.

9
midwest.social

Just some humble guys who pooled their money to buy it for $100,000 and then renovate it for $3.3mil.

36

Come on anyone can do this, just pull yourself up by the bootstraps already!

8

See that is a money making use I can get behind. There is such a shortage of elder care now.

1

You reached the end