Quote:
Originally Posted by bunt_q
No, that actually doesn't make any sense at all. First, it's not a seat of our pants perscpetive. It's the perspective of a very expensive and thorough study commissioned by DRCOG - directed by the legislature and conducted by one of the most reputable firms in town - which clearly found our situation to be abnormal in every way, as compared to peer markets. (The Dems who requested the study ignored it just as soon as it didn't agree with their preconceived notions; we dare not ever criticize climate change deniers when our side is just as bad.) Second, that conflicts with every other developer I know. Third, the market analysis doesn't make sense. It takes a certain threshold to get an apartment project off the ground - there's a reason most projects hover right around 300 units. But there is no market based reason why a developer - perhaps a smaller developer - wouldn't tackle a smaller condo project, which is actually exactly what our zoning, and probably market demand, would call for. Yet you don't see any of those projects here, whereas they are common in every other peer city.
So no, basically, this isn't a matter of opinion. The facts just don't support that conclusion at all.
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Not a study that I was even aware of but it doesn't change my agreement with
Stonemans_rowJ. But I suspect you are both right.
I'll assume that the DRCOG study was for
Metro Denver while I assume
Stonemans_rowJ was focusing on the downtown area. But I'd guess you're right about the smaller developer building condos even in the near downtown area.
I can think of a couple of likely downtown condo projects that sit on the shelf waiting for the construction defects law to change but in the big scheme of things
Stonemans_rowJ is right that apartments are much easier to finance with less risk (not counting the defects situation) and liquidate at good returns if desired.
I do not doubt the negative affect of the existing defects law with developers though. I'm sure there would be more interest in condo construction if not for the current mess. I think
Stonemans_rowJ was more asking the question and I think his points are well taken.
I say you are both right.
bunt_q... Would you have an opinion on the good question raised by
Denver about whether developers can rely on city passed defects laws to supersede the state laws?