Michigan Real Estate News

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Home Costs Rise As New Building Permits Dip

As interest rates and materials costs rose, the number of single-family home permits in metro Detroit fell in April.  The number of permits across Detroit Metro counties dropped to 303 in April from 414 in March. That’s a 27% drop. When compared to April 2021, they number of permits dropped 31%.  Builders whose business was split between commercial and residential projects have seen it flip to entirely commercial. They cite rising costs, interest rates and supply chain issues. Buyers don’t have the money to cover the rising costs during actual construction. In addition, there aren’t enough workers to keep up with labor demands.

 

 

Northville Downs Developer Pitches Reduced-Housing Plan

The proposed Northville Downs development continues to work through the municipal approval process. Hunter Pasteur Homes has been meeting with the Planning Commission on a plan that would bring in excess of 440 units of housing to the horse racing track site. The development would include 38 single-family homes, 98 townhomes, 28 carriage houses, 62 row houses, 172 apartments and 43 condominiums. A third of the site’s acreage would be designated to parks and green space, along with commercial space. The 11-acre northern portion of the Northville Downs site has been sold to Perennial Northville LLC, an affiliate of Hunter Pasteur.

 

Detroit Metro Office Construction Costs Soar to Unprecedented Heights

According to a new report from the Chicago-based brokerage JLL, the construction costs of new office space in metro Detroit has increased by double digits, in excess of 25 percent in some cases. This is in keeping with the trend across North America with costs increasing 22.9 percent year over year.  The trend includes a 25.4 percent increase in hard costs, 20.8 percent increase in soft costs, 22 percent increase in FF&E and a 12 percent increase in tenant factors. The increases are caused by spikes in material costs, supply chain disruptions and labor shortages. The rising construction costs are unprecedented.