The city's for-sale housing market is experiencing fits and
starts on a seemingly unending road to recovery. The luxury rental market, on
the other hand, remains hot.
Yet another illustration of that comes Wednesday with the
official opening of Dranoff Properties' Southstar Lofts, an 85-unit, mid-rise
rental project at Broad and South Streets that is heavier on one-bedrooms than
the company's fully leased 777 South Broad a few blocks away.
Developer Carl Dranoff considers the buildings
complementary, and tenants at Southstar will get to use the roof deck at 777
and will share other amenities.
Rents will range from $1,595 to $3,395 a month, he said.
About 63 percent of those leasing are singles in their 20s, and 35 percent list
their occupation as medicine. Most earn $50,000 to $150,000, and 48 percent are
moving from within six blocks.
The $32 million project, which is 40 percent (38 tenants)
leased, took just 13 months to complete from the time Dranoff reached agreement
with the building's neighbors on height, setback, and other issues.
Although many projects conceived in the housing boom opened
during the bust with often-troubling results, the relatively quick turnaround
for Southstar was not to catch the luxury-rental wave.
"We wanted to bring it to market in spring, when the
rental market is strongest, looking for spring and summer occupancy," said
Dranoff, who in the accord with neighbors altered the design to create a
seven-story stone building along Broad and a four-story brick structure along
South.
He is most excited about "Lightplay," the
sculptural element on the façade of Southstar that will cost $750,000: "It
will be the ribbon on our jewel box."
Dranoff is one of the better-known developers of high-end
multifamily housing in the city, but others have been working the luxury rental
market with new offerings or buying buildings with the goal of turning them
into spaces young professionals and empty-nesters want to live in:
In June, the $100 million, 34-story 2116 Chestnut opened,
with 100 of its 321 units already leased.
In recent months, the Avenue of the Arts Building at 1338-48
Chestnut St. was bought for a reported $33 million, to be renovated for 220
apartments.
The 270-unit Edgewater Apartments complex at 2323 Race St.
sold for a reported $113 million to the J.P. Morgan Investment Fund, a deal
that included an approved site for 240 more units.
Aquinas Realty Partners has broken ground for AQ
Rittenhouse, a 12-story, 110-unit mixed-use building at 20th and Chestnut
Streets that will include apartments.
In University City, the Radnor Group is building a 25-story
residential tower as part of a $110 million project at 13-19 S. 38th St.
And Treetop Development of Teaneck, N.J., has bought Charter
Court at East Falls, a 502-unit high-rise apartment complex, for $47.25
million. It plans $7 million in upgrades.
Interest in the city from outside investors does not
surprise Spencer Yablon, vice president and regional manager of the real estate
investment services firm Marcus & Millichap's Philadelphia office.
"Capital has options, and it flows to different places
for different reasons," Yablon said. "It flows to Philadelphia for
yield."
By Philadelphia standards, prices locally are recovering to
pre-housing-downturn levels, "but by comparison to other markets, real
estate is still cheap," he said.
What you don't see here is the high return of New York,
Boston, and Washington, Yablon said, but this market is beginning to show signs
of what drives appreciation in other cities, including job growth in places
such as University City and the Navy Yard.
For developers, there is access to "an abundance of
debt and equity capital looking for multifamily opportunities," he said.
On the debt side, "it depends on who you are,"
Yablon said. "If you are a developer or investor with a track record, and
development makes good sense, the lenders are abundant and aggressive."
Said Dranoff: "It's all about the money spigot being
turned on for multifamily rentals based on favorable trend lines for
millennials."
But, as Yablon noted, "if this is your first rodeo, you
have challenges, because no one wants to make a mistake."
Economist Kevin Gillen, who tracks real estate in the region
and whose recent report on first-quarter 2014 city sales confirmed the for-sale
market's "fits and starts" quality, said the rental market in and
around Center City remained strong, "and that is something we should
generally be glad for."
But, he said, "I can't help but have the same feeling
about the rental market today that I had about the housing market back in
2005."
The key reason for rentals' resurgence here is "the
bursting of the housing bubble," Gillen said, causing a significant shift
of the adult population away from owner-occupancy.
Consequently, though average house prices are down 19
percent from their peak of several years ago, rents rose 10 percent during the
same period.
Housing faces tight credit, a sluggish economy, and
relatively high unemployment among low-income and young households.
"But all of the new rental supply scheduled to come
back on to the market this year should give us another shove in that
direction," he said.
"I don't know exactly when the market will rebalance
itself between renters and owners," Gillen said, "but I do know that
if something can't go on indefinitely, it won't."
OTHER PROJECTS
In addition to the 85 units at Southstar Lofts, other units
joining the Phila. apartment market include:
321Opened in June at 2116 Chestnut St.
240 Planned to be added to the 270 units already at the
Edgewater Apartments at 2323 Race St.
220 Planned in a renovation at 1338-48 Chestnut St.
110 Planned as part of a mixed-use project at 20th and
Chestnut Streets.
Source: Philly.com
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