Quote:
Originally Posted by combusean
This video is sketchy as hell. There's 4 different owners, Glasir, the city owns a small parking lot, Schneider and Schneider (who has owned a large two-block U-shaped parcel for decades) and an individual owner on one of those corner buildings. I have a feeling there'd be some sort of disposition we'd have heard about at least from the city.
Then they say there's high-rise zoning allowing for 500', which is fundamentally not true, the limits are 483/458 for the south two blocks and 250' for the north block.
Then saying ASU employs 120,000 there is bullshit--note the "Thunderbuild" typo. Their copy for pharmacy is wrong and conflated with Tucson. I don't think Phoenix's median home price has been in the mid 200s for a decade or more. Google and Facebook coming to Phoenix would be front-page news.
The video is full of typos, awful grammar, and placeholder text...confirmed in that last frame, this is a beta that shouldn't have been put on a public site. ...Amateurs. I don't care, I'm keeping my play-by-play.
Cool recent drone shots tho.
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Maybe they’re trying to buy the other two plots and using this video to drum up interest as leverage?
The Thunderbuild was a clue whoever put this together didn’t do their homework.
RE: Median home prices - their stats are recent, just not the most recent. From the BizJounral:
“ In December 2015, the median new home price was about $298,000 and the median resale price was about $205,000 — a difference of $29,000, he said.
Today, the median new home price is $354,000 and the median resale is $325,000 — a difference of $29,000.
"In almost five years, the median new home price in metro Phoenix has increased $56,000 or almost 19% versus resale price increase of 59% over the same time period," Kosan said. "The lack of resale supply and the lower $29,000 price differential is leading more buyers to new homes."”
https://www.bizjournals.com/phoenix/...rdability.html