Financing Soft-Story Retrofits on LA Apartment Buildings
A large share of Los Angeles's older wood-frame apartment stock, the classic 1960s-70s dingbat with parking underneath, is exactly the building type LA's soft-story retrofit ordinance targets. Retrofit status is one of the first questions a lender asks about an older building, and financing the work itself is its own conversation.
The Numbers That Matter
What the Ordinances Actually Require
Ordinance 183893 targets wood-frame buildings with a 'soft' ground floor, typically tuck-under parking or ground-floor commercial space, built before January 1, 1978. The city set retrofit deadlines that have mostly passed at this point, meaning any building still non-compliant is a real, present diligence flag rather than a future deadline to plan around. Typical retrofit cost runs $60,000 to $130,000 or more depending on building size and configuration.
A separate division of the same ordinance targets non-ductile concrete buildings built before 1977, which are structurally distinct from wood-frame soft-story buildings and generally far more expensive to fix: retrofit costs can run $80 to $120 per square foot, and on some buildings that number can exceed the value of the building itself.
A third category, unreinforced masonry (URM) buildings under the city's Division 88 program, has mostly already been retrofitted or demolished, but any surviving example should be checked against LADBS compliance records before acquisition.
Financing the Retrofit Itself
Retrofit costs are commonly financed three ways: as part of an acquisition loan (the lender underwrites the retrofit as a required capital item and may hold back proceeds until it is complete), as a standalone renovation or PACE-style loan against an already-owned building, or as a negotiated price reduction where the seller effectively finances it through a lower purchase price.
Bridge lenders are generally the most comfortable underwriting a building with pending soft-story work, provided the scope and cost estimate come from a licensed structural engineer and are reasonable relative to the building's value. Banks and agency lenders typically want the retrofit substantially complete, or at minimum well underway with a hard completion date, before committing to permanent financing.
Non-Ductile Concrete: A Different Conversation
Because non-ductile concrete retrofit costs can rival or exceed a building's value, these properties are sometimes better underwritten as land or redevelopment plays rather than renovation candidates. A lender evaluating a non-ductile concrete acquisition should model both the retrofit cost and a demolition-and-rebuild alternative side by side before assuming renovation is the right business plan.
This distinction, soft-story wood-frame versus non-ductile concrete, is one of the most consequential underwriting questions on any pre-1978 LA apartment building, and it should be confirmed with a structural engineer's report, not assumed from building age alone.
Financing Soft-Story Retrofits on LA Apartment Buildings: FAQ
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