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When Should I Demolish an Old Building Versus Build-to-Suit?

Kory WhiteCurated by Kory White · Fractional CRO, CRO Syndicate
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Don’t get screwed.</text><text x="58" y="258" font-family="Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif" font-size="30" font-weight="600" fill="#6b5b4d">Leases, TI, NNN &amp; buildouts — negotiated in your favor</text><g transform="translate(1010,86)" fill="none" stroke="#C0531F" stroke-width="9" stroke-linejoin="round"><rect x="20" y="40" width="150" height="130"/><line x1="20" y1="40" x2="95" y2="6"/><line x1="170" y1="40" x2="95" y2="6"/><rect x="50" y="80" width="36" height="36"/><rect x="104" y="80" width="36" height="36"/><rect x="74" y="128" width="42" height="42"/></g></svg>

When Should I Demolish an Old Building Versus Build-to-Suit?

Direct Answer

Run the math before you fall in love with either path: demolish-and-rebuild wins when the existing shell is functionally obsolete, the land is worth more empty, or renovation would cost more than 70% of new construction — the old appraiser's rule of thumb that still holds. Full demolition runs $4–$12 per square foot for a standard commercial structure (more with asbestos, lead paint, or deep foundations), while ground-up build-to-suit lands at $150–$350 per square foot depending on use and market.

If the bones are sound — good column spacing, adequate clear height, a roof with 10+ years left — a deep retrofit at $50–$150 per square foot almost always beats starting over and gets you occupied 6–12 months faster. The single biggest money move: never demolish a building you don't have to, because demolition is 100% sunk cost with zero recoverable value, whereas every renovation dollar buys you usable space.

Get a Phase I environmental and a structural engineer's report before you sign anything — a surprise asbestos abatement can add $15–$40 per square foot and detonate your entire pro forma. And if a landlord is pushing demolition on a build-to-suit lease, make sure *they* carry that cost in the rent math, not you.

The 70% Rule And When To Trust It

The construction industry's rule of thumb: if a renovation costs more than 70% of replacement cost, tear it down. It's a starting point, not gospel. The rule breaks in three directions:

Always price the *all-in* number: demolition plus new construction plus soft costs (design, permits, financing carry) versus renovation plus the lost time. Soft costs run 15–25% of hard construction on either path and people forget them constantly.

Demolition Costs — The Real Numbers

Demolition pricing is wildly variable, so get three competitive bids:

The hidden upside: salvage and deconstruction credits. Selling steel, copper, fixtures, and structural timber can claw back 5–15% of demo cost, and donated materials may generate a tax deduction. Always ask demo contractors to bid both "demolition" and "deconstruction" so you can compare.

Build-To-Suit — Who Actually Pays

In a build-to-suit (BTS) deal, a developer or landlord constructs a building to your specs and leases it back to you, usually on a 10–20 year term. The catch: *you* pay for all of it through rent. BTS rent is typically priced as a cap rate spread on total project cost — if the developer's all-in cost is $200 per square foot and they want a 7.5% return, your rent floor is $15 per square foot before profit margin and financing spread.

Levers that protect you in a BTS:

flowchart TD A[Existing building on site] --> B{Phase I environmental<br/>+ structural report clean?} B -->|No: contamination<br/>or structural failure| C[Lean toward demolition] B -->|Yes: sound bones| D{Renovation cost<br/>> 70% of new build?} D -->|Yes| C D -->|No| E{Nonconforming envelope<br/>worth protecting?} E -->|Yes| F[Renovate / retrofit] E -->|No| G{Time-to-occupancy<br/>critical?} G -->|Yes| F G -->|No| H{Land worth more<br/>empty?} H -->|Yes| I[Demolish + build-to-suit] H -->|No| F C --> I

How Not To Get Screwed By The Landlord

If a landlord is steering you toward demolition or a BTS, assume their incentives are not yours. Watch for these traps:

flowchart LR A[Landlord proposes<br/>demo + rebuild] --> B[Demand itemized<br/>cost stack] B --> C[Negotiate cap rate<br/>down 25-50 bps] C --> D[Lock base-building<br/>definition in writing] D --> E[Strip restoration<br/>clause from lease] E --> F[Add purchase option<br/>at fixed cap rate] F --> G[Sign LOI with<br/>scope + unit prices fixed]

A Quick Decision Framework

  1. Pull a Phase I environmental and a structural report first. This is $3,000–$8,000 and it controls everything downstream.
  2. Price renovation all-in (hard + soft + time) against demo + new build all-in.
  3. Check the zoning envelope — is the existing footprint nonconforming and irreplaceable?
  4. Run the rent math on any landlord-financed path at the *real* cap rate.
  5. Decide on dollars and time, not emotion. The prettiest plan is rarely the cheapest.

FAQ

How much does it cost to demolish a commercial building? Expect $4–$12 per square foot for the structure itself, with asbestos abatement adding $15–$40 per square foot of affected area and foundation removal often billed separately. Get three competitive bids and ask each to price deconstruction-with-salvage, which can recover 5–15% of the cost.

Is it cheaper to renovate or rebuild a commercial property? Renovation usually wins if the building is structurally sound and the work costs under 70% of replacement value. A deep retrofit runs $50–$150 per square foot versus $150–$350 per square foot for ground-up construction, and it delivers 6–12 months faster — worth a year of rent you should add to the comparison.

Who pays for demolition in a build-to-suit lease? The tenant always pays, just indirectly. Demolition and construction costs get baked into the rent at the developer's cap rate, so a $1 million demo at an 8% cap adds roughly $80,000 a year to your rent. Demand an itemized, open-book cost stack so you can negotiate the cap rate and developer fee down.

What is a restoration clause and why does it matter? A restoration clause requires the tenant to remove its improvements and return the space to base-building condition at lease end, which on a heavy buildout can cost six figures. Always try to strike it, cap it at a fixed dollar amount, or limit it to specialized non-standard improvements only.

When does the 70% rule not apply? It breaks when location, zoning, or time dominate. An obsolete building on irreplaceable infill land may be worth demolishing well below 70%, while a nonconforming envelope you could never rebuild today is worth protecting even above 90% renovation cost.

Sources

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