The last two days I've been thinking about the fact that there are homeless people sleeping in the doorways of office buildings that have been empty for years. Seems like there's some obvious synergy there. Converting offices to actual apartments involves non-trivial construction, but we're talking about folks who'd be sleeping on cots or on the floor in sleeping bags anyway. I would think the city could help the building owner with real estate taxes and water & heating bills, even if they couldn't actually pay 'market value' for the space. I have to put market value in finger-quotes because, like I say, these office spaces have been empty for years. It's not just because of the pandemic. Any money the owners would get in such a scheme would be more than what they're getting now, or are likely to get in the near future, even if it's just in the form of tax breaks.
I guess there could be some zoning law complicating things, but that ought to be something the city could waive if it wanted to. Insurance might be an issue. Everyday wear and tear, without even considering vandalism or accidental damage from occupants who don't have their own insurance. I don't know if something designated as "emergency housing" or whatever is allowed to have no cooking fixtures. Installing a proper kitchen would be one of the big expenses of converting commercial space to residential space. Not all offices even have access to running water, so you might have to run whole new pipes to some parts of an office building. Like I say, converting offices to real apartments can be non-trivial. But still, I'm walking past people sleeping in the doorway of an empty building (and they're evidently conscientious enough to not break in and squat - it rained like Hell last night). It just seems excessively dumb. Could probably use some of that space for a clinic or a safe injection site too. One of the world's premier hospitals is literally walking distance away. I'm not sure what the city's stance on safe injection sites is. That might be a bridge too far. But you catch my drift.