Most investors think the only way to grow is to buy more properties. More deals, more down payments, more risk. But what if the biggest opportunity you're missing is sitting right next to the property you already own?
That's exactly what happened to Chris Thorndike, one of our CRE Accelerator members based in Gainesville, Florida. Chris doubled his cash flow without buying a single new property. No new bank relationship. No new construction risk. And the whole thing started with a value add real estate play that most people would have completely overlooked.
Let me break down how he did it. And whether you've already got a building or you're still working through how to buy your first commercial property, this is the kind of value-add thinking that separates the people who build real wealth from the ones who just collect rent checks.
In This Article
From Abandoned Car Wash to Value Add Real Estate Goldmine
The Value Add Real Estate Move Hiding in Plain Sight
How He's Financing the Conversion With an LOI-Backed Line of Credit
Why Small Bay Warehouse and Micro Suites Are the Future
If you've ever wondered whether value add real estate investing is really worth the effort, this story should put that question to rest.
Chris Thorndike: By the Numbers
2x
Cash Flow Increase
$400K
Original Purchase
0
New Properties Bought
2.5 yrs
Zero Vacancy
From Abandoned Car Wash to Value Add Real Estate Goldmine
Chris originally picked up a rundown $400,000 warehouse building in Gainesville that came with an old, abandoned car wash sitting right next to it. Most people looked at that car wash and saw a liability: a dilapidated structure that needed to be demolished or left to rot. Chris looked at it and saw potential.
After buying the warehouse, Chris converted it into small bay units and leased it up to local businesses. The property has had zero vacancy in two and a half years. That alone is a great deal. But Chris didn't stop there.
He looked at the abandoned car wash right next door, a building he already owned, and realized he could convert it into micro suite office space. Same lot, same ownership, zero acquisition cost for the additional building. That's the kind of commercial real estate investing move that separates the people who build real wealth from the people who just collect rent checks.
The Value Add Real Estate Move Hiding in Plain Sight
Here's what makes this deal so brilliant. Chris isn't going out and sourcing a new property. He isn't competing with other buyers, negotiating with sellers, or taking on the risk of a new market. He's taking an underutilized asset he already owns and turning it into a cash flow machine.
The conversion plan is to build out the old car wash into multiple micro suites, small office spaces between 150 and 300 square feet. These units are perfect for solo practitioners, consultants, small agencies, and anyone who needs a professional workspace but doesn't need (or want to pay for) a full-size office.
"The best deal in commercial real estate is often the one you've already done. Chris didn't need to find a new building. He just needed to look at what was sitting right next to his existing investment and ask, 'What else can I do with this?'"
- Tyler Cauble
The demand for this type of space is massive right now, especially in mid-size markets like Gainesville. Small businesses and independent professionals want flexible, affordable office space without the overhead of a traditional lease. Chris is solving a real problem in his market, and he's doing it with a building that was literally sitting there doing nothing.
How He's Financing the Conversion With an LOI-Backed Line of Credit
So how do you fund a conversion project when you don't want to tie up a bunch of cash? Chris is using a strategy that's incredibly smart for value add real estate investors: he got LOIs (letters of intent) from prospective tenants before going to the bank.
When you walk into a lender with signed LOIs showing that tenants are ready to move in as soon as the buildout is complete, it completely changes the conversation. The bank sees pre-leased demand, not speculative construction. That allowed Chris to secure a line of credit specifically for the conversion, funded by the demonstrated demand for the space.
This is a pattern I see over and over with successful commercial real estate investors. They don't just have a good idea; they validate the demand first, then use that validation to unlock financing. If you want to understand how to underwrite a deal like this, the LOI strategy is something you should absolutely have in your toolkit.
Why Small Bay Warehouse and Micro Suites Are the Future
Chris's deal highlights one of the biggest trends I'm seeing in industrial real estate right now: the explosion in demand for small, flexible spaces. Small bay warehouses, flex industrial, and micro office suites are quietly outperforming bigger, sexier asset classes.
Higher rent per square foot. Small tenants pay a premium for flexibility. You're getting more revenue from every square foot than you would with one large tenant.
Diversified risk. With 6 or 10 tenants instead of 1, losing a single tenant barely dents your income. Chris has had zero vacancy in 2.5 years, but even if he lost one tenant, he'd still be at 90%+ occupancy.
Lower barrier to entry. You don't need a $2 million building to make this work. Chris started with a $400K warehouse conversion.
Sticky tenants. Small business owners who find a great, affordable space tend to stay. They build out their suite, establish their customer base, and they don't want to move.
The institutional investors aren't chasing these deals because they're too small. That's your advantage. While everyone else is fighting over Class A office buildings and big-box retail, you can quietly build a portfolio of high-cash-flow micro suite properties that nobody else is paying attention to.
The Lesson Every Investor Needs to Hear
Before you go chase the next shiny deal, look at what you already own.
Chris could have spent months searching for a new property. He could have tied up capital in another down payment. He could have taken on all the risk that comes with buying something you've never managed before.
Instead, he looked at the building sitting 20 feet from his most successful investment and asked one question: can I do the same thing here?
The answer was yes. And it's going to double his cash flow.
"You're not just buying properties. You're creating value in properties. And sometimes the biggest opportunity isn't out there somewhere. It's right in front of you."
That's the power of thinking like a value add investor. You're not just buying properties. You're creating value in properties. And sometimes the biggest opportunity isn't out there somewhere. It's right in front of you.
Key Takeaways
Value add real estate investing doesn't always mean buying a new property. Chris doubled his cash flow by converting an abandoned car wash he already owned into micro suite office space.
Small bay warehouse and micro suites are in high demand. Small tenants pay premium rents, diversify your risk, and tend to stay long-term.
Use LOIs to unlock financing. Getting letters of intent from prospective tenants before approaching your lender turns a speculative project into a pre-leased deal.
Look at what you already own. The best deal might be the underutilized asset sitting right next to your existing investment.
Institutional investors ignore small deals. That's your competitive advantage in micro suite and small bay warehouse investing.
This article is adapted from a conversation on the Tyler Cauble YouTube channel. If you want to hear Chris's full story, including the details of his financing strategy, the buildout plan, and how he's positioning the micro suites for maximum cash flow, watch the full episode above.
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