Southeast Michigan’s Housing Market Is Stabilizing
/in Detroit, SE Michigan /by Tracy WillisSoutheast Michigan’s housing market is becoming more stable. The number of buyers is decreasing due to growing interest rates and high home prices. Sales of homes in southeast Michigan in July were down by almost 20 percent from July of last year. Pending sales are declining rapidly, and properties are sitting longer on the market. According to the Realcomp report, the costs of buying a home is 80 percent more expensive now than three summers ago. Detroit is ahead of the rest of the region for growing housing prices. The median price of a home in Detroit has grown 38 percent since last year, having surpassed $100,000 for the first time in history.
Rent And Occupancy Rates Are on The Rise in Metro Detroit
/in Detroit, SE Michigan /by Tracy WillisApartments are a hot commodity in Detroit with supply falling short of demand. Rent costs and occupancy rates in the metro area are increasing. According to the Detroit Multifamily Real Estate Figures, occupancy rate is at 96 percent for multifamily residences in Detroit. The asking rental rate per square foot has increased from $1.64 to $1.72 over the last six quarters. Supply and demand issues, as well as new developments and redevelopment of existing property, are impacting rental rates. Suburban rental rates follow a similar pattern.
Michigan Mobile Home Owners Feel The Pinch As Lot Rent Increases
/in National, SE Michigan, Uncategorized /by Tracy WillisAcross the U.S., private equity investors are buying up manufactured housing communities and driving up lot rents. Many mobile homeowners have lower or fixed incomes, and increases in rent make it difficult to meet expenses. Older mobile home residents are particularly impacted, often lacking money for adequate food. A series of Michigan bills could hamper those investors’ actions by creating more protections for mobile homeowners and updating the state’s manufactured housing law. Mobile home ownership is one of the few affordable housing options in rural and urban areas.
Ann Arbor Planning Commission To Hold Hearings On New Proposals
/in SE Michigan /by Tracy WillisThe Ann Arbor Planning Commission will hold public hearings on three new development proposals on Wednesday, August 3 at 7:00 p.m. The projects include a four-story residential building with 185 new housing units, the reimagining of The George mixed-use apartment and retail complex, and a special-exception use proposal for a childcare center. The new housing units would redevelop the University Inn site. The reimagining of The George would convert 23,462 square feet of ground floor retail space to 42 residential units. The proposal for the childcare center would repurpose an existing building at 1301 Morningside Drive in northwest Ann Arbor.
The Office Market Continues to Limp Post Pandemic
/in SE Michigan /by Tracy WillisMore than two years after the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, the office market is still reeling. Sublet office space availability is at a 10-year high. Over 2.37 million square feet is available in the five-county area. Office tenants are subletting unused space. If they are unable to sublease, they give back the additional space to landlords, usually in an early lease restructure or relocation to another place. According to the president of the Advocate Commercial Real Estate Advisors LLC brokerage house, the amount of sublease space on the market will increase in the next 3 to 6 months. In addition, leasing activity is slower than usual, and no new construction of office space occurred in the second quarter.
The Platform Buys Out HFZ
/in Detroit /by Tracy WillisPeter Cummings’ Detroit-based development firm, The Platform LLC, along with New York city-based Rheal Capital Managment LLC, has bought out the majority ownership interests of the HFZ Capital group of the 28 story high-rise on West Grand Boulevard in Detroit’s New Center area. Terms of the deal have not been disclosed. According to Cummings, they plan to work on the building’s facade, as well as electrical, elevators, doors and upgrades to the parking garage. There were many local and out-of-state buyers who made serious offers, but Cummings was concerned about stewardship of the property, as well a capital. Instead, they ended up taking out HFZ, a move which allows for more flexibility as they move forward with the property.