Archive for the 'Charlottesville' Category

Mar 12 2007

Charlottesville Spillover Drive up Staunton Housing Prices

The Staunton News Leader had a Neat Article About Augusta County Property Values, detailing how the housing market in Staunton, Waynesboro and Augusta County has risen drastically due to pressure from the east.  The big selling point here seems to be price pressure from Charlottesville and Winchester, which makes Augusta County and its cities seem like an inexpensive alternative.

“Augusta has a significant amount of spillover growth, just on your side of Afton Mountain, from Charlottesville,” said Theodore Koebel, director of the Center for Housing Research at Virginia Tech. “You have people commuting over the mountain and buying homes because, compared to the Charlottesville area, they may be seen as a bargain.”

Buyers priced out of Harrisonburg might be looking south for housing options, said Darryl Crawford, a planner who analyzed six years of sales data to compile the newest report. Sales in greater Harrisonburg dropped in 2005, but remained steady in greater Augusta.

“For somebody who works in Harrisonburg, they could easily live in north Staunton or Augusta County,” said real estate agent Diane Woodson, who markets her Staunton and Waynesboro houses to buyers in Harrisonburg and Charlottesville.

But the report also shows housing cost increases outpacing wage increases locally. When adjusted for inflation, home prices rose 50 percent, but wages actually dropped by $161 a year in Staunton and $1,998 a year in Waynesboro. 

… 

“I don’t think the city, or anybody else, is putting enough emphasis on affordable housing,” said Staunton City Councilwoman Rita Wilson. “The average person is being pushed out.”  Koebel said it is important not to read too much into the rising home prices for now. The Augusta market is still small enough that one new subdivision or a few expensive purchases could swing the statistics.

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Feb 27 2007

DailyProgress.com | County GOP seeks lower tax rate

This is good stuff.  DailyProgress reports that the Albemarle County Republican Committee is seeking a substantial decrease in the county’s real estate tax rate, now 74 cents per $100 of assessed value.

The Republicans’ argument hinges on a Virginia law that requires localities to hold a public hearing if property assessments go up more than 1 percent. If localities do not hold the public hearing, the tax rate cannot be set higher than the rate that would account for the increase in assessments.

In this case, Albemarle County Republicans say the rate would fall to 58 cents per $100 of assessed value to account for the rise in assessments. That amount would give the county slightly more in real estate revenue than what it had last year - that’s the point of the law, proponents of the Republican’s view say.

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Feb 20 2007

DailyProgress.com | Increasing assessments tough on many

Per the DailyProgress Charlottesville assessments are up big this year, hitting poor neighborhoods particularly hard.  Here’s a chart of the percent increases:

Charlottesville tax districts with the highest and lowest percentage increases in existing housing assessments:
Top 5
1. Fifeville - 32 percent
2. Venable - 27 percent
3. Willoughby - 24 percent
4. Forest Hills - 22 percent
5. (tie) 10th & Page - 20 percent
5. (tie) Ridge Street - 20 percent
Bottom 5
1. University-Maury Hills - 0 percent
2. (tie) Towles-Merryden-Ivy Terrace - 3 percent
2. (tie) Azalea Gardens-Green Valley - 3 percent
4. 28 Holmes & North Avenue Area - 6 percent
5. Little High St./E. Jefferson St. - 7 percent

From the article:

The assessments of houses in Fifeville jumped 32 percent this year, the highest rate of any tax district in the city, following a 24 percent jump the prior year. Values of homes in the Ridge Street area spiked by 20 percent, compared with 8 percent the year before.

The average increase of existing residential home assessments in the city was 16.2 percent, with the typical Charlottesville house now worth approximately $280,000, said Roosevelt Barbour Jr., the city’s assessor.

Driving the demand for houses in these communities is the old real estate mantra of location, location, location. Situated halfway between UVa and the Downtown Mall, Fifeville and 10th and Page now draw young couples like the Pearsons who are attracted by easy access to the city’s main commercial center without the necessity of owning a car. 

I’ve been involved in Central Virginia real estate for more than a decade and the best time to buy has always been “a couple years ago”.  In hindsight that means NOW.  I’ve been more bearish lately on Charlottesville, feeling like things are as high as they can sustainably be right now.  The Staunton and Waynesboro markets seem to have more runway, in my opinion.  I’m not ready to say that a single family home in Charlottesville is a bad investment, but for investment property, I think greener fields lie elsewhere.

There does seem to be an oversupply of townhomes in Charlottesville, but those prices aren’t coming down like they are in other parts of the country.  I think the developers of the condos and the apartments-converted-into-condos in Cville are sufficiently diversified in the cash-cow that has been the Charlottesville real estate economy, that they’re neither willing nor needing to sell at bargain prices to cut their losses.  They’d just as soon double down.  The real opportunity in Charlottesville seems to be for people wanting to rent those condos.  When there’s oversupply in housing, even if the owners won’t sell at a loss, they still would rather lose money with low rent than eat the entire mortgage.  Empty apartments are expensive.

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Feb 09 2007

Habitat for Humanity Buys Sunrise Trailer Park

Sunrise Trailer park, on ridge street near Old Lynchburg road has been purchased by the local chapter of Habitat for Humanity (see: Habitat Affiliate Buys Old Trailer Parks / Charlottesville Group is First in U.S. To Try Redevelopment Plan)   Continue Reading »

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Feb 07 2007

Research Parks Reap Intangible Benefits

Published by stierle under Charlottesville, UVA

The Cavalier Daily has an article today about the North Fork and Fontaine Research Parks.  I was astounded to hear that North Fork was more than 500 acres.  I’ve been told that by 2020, the population center of Charlottesville would be near the intersection of 29 and airport road.  That’s incredible if true.  That said, that estimate was made with the initial, wildly optimistic projections U.Va. made about staffing levels at the research park.  Still…

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Jan 31 2007

The Gap Narrows

Charlottesville Assessments Contionue to Increase Faster than Property Values, narrowing the gap between the market value and the taxed value. 

After decades of nominal assessment increases, the City of Charlottesville continues its trend started in the late 90’s of making assessments closer to fair market.  It used to be your assessment stayed pretty steady near the price you paid for it, until you chose to sell.  One landlord told me:

“I bought my first house in Charlottesville for $130K in 2001.  It was then assessed at $60,000.  Todays that assessment is over $220,000.  That’s a 300% growth in taxed value in six years!”.  Per the Daily Progress article today:

Charlottesville’s assessed property values increased by an average of 14.3 percent during 2006, a slight drop compared with the previous year’s assessments, according to a Tuesday press release from the city.

In 2005, the assessed property values rose by an average of 15.9 percent.

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Jan 26 2007

University of Virginia Pays Millions For Property Near South Lawn

The article in the Cav Daily discusses the new millionaires who owned property along Brandon ave.  Those prices are making the University’s trade with Woddard Properties for all the Brandon Ave apartments, which seemed ridiculous to me at the time (that huge parking lot on the coner and $5 or 6 million for a hodge podge of Brandon Ave. properties) more reasonable.

The University needs to pull out the eminent domain card just once to keep from getting gouged.  They forked over millions this month to save face with the community. 

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Jan 18 2007

Coran Capshaw and MusicToday Featured in Fast Company Mag

There was a great article in Fast Company Magazine about Music Today, and its founder Coran Capshaw (the man who is slowly acquiring and developing all of Charlottesville and the valley).  The article is fascinating.  it’s disappointing that Music Today has been mostly acquired by heavyweight Live Nation (have the headquarters here insures white collar jobs in addition to the blue collar, not to mention the benefit of donations to the arts and other charities.  Anyhow, the article is a nice inside look at how things work at the company.

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