Blue Dirt

How To Turn A Multi-Tenant Property Into Sellable Units

14 min · 6. maj 2026
episode How To Turn A Multi-Tenant Property Into Sellable Units cover

Beskrivelse

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2456774/fan_mail/new] One legal change can reshape the entire value of a commercial property. We get very specific about a strategy we’re actively using: converting a multi-tenant building into commercial condo units you can sell separately while keeping shared areas under an HOA. If you’ve ever wondered whether the sum of the parts can be worth more than the whole, this conversation gives you a real-world framework, not a theory from a textbook. We start with a simple warehouse example where each building becomes its own condo unit and the land and common areas roll into association ownership. Then we move into the bigger challenge: a professional office building with 26 suites, uneven unit sizes, and years of deferred maintenance that had to be corrected before the asset could stabilize. We talk about the condo conversion process step-by-step, including why the survey is slow and expensive, how attorneys assemble the declaration and condominium documents, and what has to happen before units can be individually deeded and sold. We also dig into the business case: tenant demand for ownership, why smaller spaces often sell at a higher price per square foot, and how we’re thinking about marketing vacant suites first. You’ll hear how seller financing can create a win-win for tenants and owners, plus the non-negotiables with banks, lender consent, and debt service coverage ratio limits that can affect how many units you can sell and what you do with the proceeds. If you’re serious about commercial real estate investing, value-add strategies, and practical ways to build long-term value, subscribe, share Blue Dirt with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest question about condo conversions. Learn more about Blue Commercial Properties on our website [https://www.bluecpm.com].

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37 episoder

episode Are You Building Value Or Buying Leaks cover

Are You Building Value Or Buying Leaks

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2456774/fan_mail/new] A commercial roof can look “fine” and still be one storm away from blowing up your budget. We bring on Max Beasley from Quality Roofing to get brutally practical about how to evaluate roof risk before you buy, what failure points show up first, and how smart owners keep small issues from turning into full roof replacement. We dig into the real-world differences between TPO, PVC, and EPDM roofing systems, including why PVC often earns its keep on restaurants and industrial buildings where grease and chemicals hit the membrane. Max also walks us through what sits under the roof surface, from deck types to polyiso insulation, code-driven R-value targets, and why tapered insulation can make drainage better while driving labor and cost. If you’ve ever wondered what you should actually look for on a roof walk, we cover flashings, coping, penetrations, seams, scuppers, and clogged drains, plus how those clues show up in a due diligence inspection report. Then we shift to ownership and operations: preventive maintenance programs, why other trades leave behind puncture-causing screws, and how metal roof fasteners and gaskets quietly age into leaks. We also talk roof coatings as a cost-conscious life extender, what a realistic warranty depends on, and how your hold strategy changes the right decision between coating, repair, and replacement. Subscribe for more commercial real estate investing fundamentals, share this with a friend who owns a leaky building, and leave a review with the roof problem you want us to tackle next. Learn more about Blue Commercial Properties on our website [https://www.bluecpm.com].

2. juni 202643 min
episode How To Find Hidden Upside In Commercial Real Estate cover

How To Find Hidden Upside In Commercial Real Estate

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2456774/fan_mail/new] A confident “that can’t be done” is one of the most expensive sentences in commercial real estate investing, especially when nobody can explain the reasoning in plain language. Michael and Don lean into a different approach: use your own common sense, stay curious, and keep asking “why” until you reach the real constraint you can actually work with. We walk through a deal that looked dead on arrival a mall outparcel that everyone insisted could not become a restaurant because of parking requirements. One simple reframing and a quick call to the city revealed the real issue, and the fix was almost embarrassingly straightforward. That’s the investor advantage: when the market believes a property can’t reach its highest and best use, pricing often bakes in a discount for an assumption that may not hold up under real due diligence. Then we shift into the building side of value creation, from fire code and mixed-use complications to hands-on verification when plans don’t match what was built. We also swap stories about everyday savings that add up fast a gutter system that “needed” full replacement until someone asked better questions, and an old-building elevator pit that went from impossible to practical once the right engineer got involved. Along the way, we talk about vendor psychology, risk aversion, and how to tell the difference between “can’t” and “not comfortable.” If you want sharper instincts for value-add real estate, smarter renovation decisions, and better conversations with architects, contractors, and engineers, this one will help. Subscribe to Blue Dirt, share it with a friend who buys or manages buildings, and leave a review with the best “no” you ever turned into a win. Learn more about Blue Commercial Properties on our website [https://www.bluecpm.com].

13. maj 202624 min
episode How To Turn A Multi-Tenant Property Into Sellable Units cover

How To Turn A Multi-Tenant Property Into Sellable Units

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2456774/fan_mail/new] One legal change can reshape the entire value of a commercial property. We get very specific about a strategy we’re actively using: converting a multi-tenant building into commercial condo units you can sell separately while keeping shared areas under an HOA. If you’ve ever wondered whether the sum of the parts can be worth more than the whole, this conversation gives you a real-world framework, not a theory from a textbook. We start with a simple warehouse example where each building becomes its own condo unit and the land and common areas roll into association ownership. Then we move into the bigger challenge: a professional office building with 26 suites, uneven unit sizes, and years of deferred maintenance that had to be corrected before the asset could stabilize. We talk about the condo conversion process step-by-step, including why the survey is slow and expensive, how attorneys assemble the declaration and condominium documents, and what has to happen before units can be individually deeded and sold. We also dig into the business case: tenant demand for ownership, why smaller spaces often sell at a higher price per square foot, and how we’re thinking about marketing vacant suites first. You’ll hear how seller financing can create a win-win for tenants and owners, plus the non-negotiables with banks, lender consent, and debt service coverage ratio limits that can affect how many units you can sell and what you do with the proceeds. If you’re serious about commercial real estate investing, value-add strategies, and practical ways to build long-term value, subscribe, share Blue Dirt with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest question about condo conversions. Learn more about Blue Commercial Properties on our website [https://www.bluecpm.com].

6. maj 202614 min
episode Good Security Raises Rents And Tenant Quality cover

Good Security Raises Rents And Tenant Quality

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2456774/fan_mail/new] Security is one of the fastest ways to change the story a commercial property tells. When a site feels dark, overgrown, or unmanaged, you do not just invite problems, you also repel the tenants who pay on time, renew, and invest in their space. We dig into the layers of commercial real estate security we evaluate when we take over an asset, and how those decisions show up later as better tenant quality, stronger rent, and fewer surprises for owners and property managers. We start with the low-cost moves that too many investors skip: landscaping that restores line of sight, trimming that removes hiding places, and fencing that stops cut-through traffic and reduces escape routes. From there we get tactical on commercial property lighting, including timers versus photo cells, LED retrofits, wall packs, and why you have to do night visits to find the real problem areas. We also share how tenant perception matters, because a building can be technically “safe” and still feel unsafe, which kills leasing. Then we address the hard part: recurring loitering and homeless sleeping on site. We explain why “asking nicely” often fails, how a documented trespass process works with local law enforcement, and how consistency over months can reset a property’s reputation. We close with security cameras, budget-friendly temporary setups, long-term hardwired planning, and access control systems that reduce rekeying, automate lock schedules, and create an audit trail when something goes missing. Subscribe to Blue Dirt, share this with a friend who owns or manages commercial property, and leave a review if these nuts-and-bolts conversations help you run a safer, more profitable building. Learn more about Blue Commercial Properties on our website [https://www.bluecpm.com].

29. apr. 202637 min
episode A Ground Lease Lets The Tenant Build While You Collect cover

A Ground Lease Lets The Tenant Build While You Collect

Send us Fan Mail [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2456774/fan_mail/new] The easiest commercial real estate deals to manage often look almost too simple on paper: own the land, lease it to a strong tenant, and let them pay to build the building. That is the promise of the ground lease, and we dig into what makes it work, when it fails, and why the best locations can command terms that most investors never see. We walk through the real definition of a ground lease and why it is usually tied to national, multi-site operators like fast food and gas station brands. Tenants typically want to buy their sites because it reduces friction and can make financing easier, so we explain the one lever that changes the conversation: time. Long lease terms, often around 20 years with renewal options, help tenants justify construction while giving the landowner stable rent and fewer landlord headaches. Don challenges the common “what happens at the end?” question, and we get specific about reversion and risk. The building does not get hauled away. Signs and equipment might, but the improvements typically stay with the ground owner, which is a huge part of the downside protection people miss. From there we compare ground leases to build-to-suit deals, including the quick math behind yield on cost, cap rates, and how developers target a basis-point spread when they sell. We also talk about the hard truth: not every parcel is ground-lease material. The sites that win are scarce and hard to duplicate, like grocery-anchored outparcels and prime corners in constrained markets. If you want to do this right the first time, we close with straightforward advice on getting experienced commercial representation. Subscribe, share Blue Dirt with a friend who invests in CRE, and leave a review so more builders and buyers can find the show. Learn more about Blue Commercial Properties on our website [https://www.bluecpm.com].

22. apr. 202614 min