Swiss Study: Empty Office Space Could House 43,000 Residents
Research reveals potential solution to housing crisis as vacant commercial properties could accommodate equivalent of Fribourg's population.
Research reveals potential solution to housing crisis as vacant commercial properties could accommodate equivalent of Fribourg's population.

"The only hope is for exemptions. Changing the law would take far too much time."
"The yield of an office building is always a little higher than for apartments. In addition, the construction costs are a little lower."
Switzerland is currently sitting on a staggering 2 million square meters of empty office spaceâa dormant resource that could theoretically solve the housing woes of an entire city. A new report by RTS reveals that if these vacant commercial properties were converted into residential units, they could accommodate a massive 43,000 people. To put this into perspective, we are talking about a population equivalent to the entire city of Fribourg, currently locked out of the market by glass walls and locked doors.
While the housing crisis deepens, leaving families and young professionals scrambling for affordable roofs over their heads, these commercial cathedrals stand silent. The sheer volume of wasted space is not just a statistic; it is a glaring inefficiency in our urban planning. With the average Swiss resident requiring 46.5 square meters of living space, the math is simple, but the reality is stark. We are facing a crisis of distribution, not just availability, where the built environment is failing to serve the urgent needs of the population.
The disconnect between supply and demand has reached critical levels in Switzerland's economic hubs. In Zurich, Geneva, and Lausanne, the apartment vacancy rate has plummeted below 1%, creating a suffocating environment for renters. Yet, ironically, these are the very cities where office vacancy is most pronounced on the periphery. RTS estimates indicate that Zurichâs empty offices alone could house 6,000 residents, while Geneva and Lausanne could accommodate 4,000 and 2,000 people respectively.
This is a tale of two cities: the overcrowded center where competition for flats is fierce, and the desolate outskirts where "For Rent" signs on commercial blocks gather dust. The crisis is not invisible; it is structural. While desperate tenants queue by the dozens for a single apartment viewing, millions of square meters of potential homes remain designated for businesses that no longer need them. The infrastructure exists, but it is located in a legal and zoning twilight zone that prevents it from alleviating the pressure on the residential market.
Why aren't developers rushing to convert these spaces? The answer is cold, hard cash. Henrik Stump, a prominent Zurich real estate developer, bluntly admits that the financial incentives simply do not exist. "The yield of an office building is always a little higher than for apartments," Stump asserts, noting that construction costs for offices are also lower. He cites his own 80-meter tower, completed in 2024 and standing half-empty, as a prime example. Despite the vacancy, there is zero intention to convert it.
This reluctance exposes a fundamental flaw in the market: it is more profitable to hold onto an empty office building in hopes of a corporate tenant than to invest in the renovations required for residential use. Owners prefer to wait, prioritizing potential commercial yields over immediate social utility. The cost of transformationâinstalling kitchens, bathrooms, and meeting energy standardsâerodes the profit margin, leaving the housing potential of these buildings trapped behind a wall of financial calculation.
Beyond the financial disincentives, a labyrinth of red tape stands in the way of progress. Converting commercial zones to residential living is a legal nightmare in Switzerland. Simon Chessex of the Lacroix Chessex architectural firm warns that "changing the law would take far too much time." He argues that the only viable path forward is through specific exemptions and case-by-case action, rather than waiting for sweeping legislative reform.
However, there are glimmers of hope in the gloom. Wincasa recently defied the trend by converting offices in Zurich into 100 loft apartments, proving it can be done. Massimo Blangiardi of Wincasa believes these projects are vital to "relieve market congestion," but admits they remain the exception, not the rule. Unless Swiss authorities and developers can align to cut through the bureaucratic thicket and incentivize renovationsâparticularly in older buildings no longer fit for modern corporate needsâthe potential to house 43,000 people will remain a theoretical fantasy rather than a concrete reality.