Quote:
Originally Posted by TakeFive
^ Not a total justification and mhays can confirm but the buildings in Seattle are, I assume, high end apartments. Arapahoe Square is on course to be a bit more affordable area of downtown. With construction costs moving ever higher and material costs likely to follow as everything seems to be enjoying a Trump bounce this definitely is a benefit for developers... which I assume was the point of mhays' affection.
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No, that's one of our three condo projects in recent years. We have an issue similar to Denver's regarding liability. The main difference I'm aware of (not knowing the nitty gritty of the laws) is that our prices are high enough that a few buildings have made sense so far. In this case the average sale last year was I believe over $800/sf. That overcame a land price at $550/sf that was straospheric back then ($71,000 per unit) but less than half of today's values. The other advantage is that all three projects have sold homes during construction rather than beforehand, so they get much higher prices.
I attended a multifamily developer/broker forum last week, and the last panel got into politics a bit. The most common feeling was that Trump could have a sizeble if unpredictable effect on the offshore (heavily Chinese) money behind much of our local development, many of our home buyers, and the immigration (and renters) we reply upon more much of our tech industry.
As for cost escalation, that's a big worry for developers. One of them worded it perfectly...no matter how high rents go, projects continue to barely make sense.