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Denver area’s building slump
hits new low
By John Rebchook, on February
16th, 2010
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Only 3,408 building permits were issued in the Denver
area, the lowest number on record.
Permits issued for single-family homes, condos and
townhomes and apartment units fell by almost 64 percent
from the 9,429 issued in 2008, which was the second
lowest year for building activity since at least 1980
in the Denver area, according to data from the Home
Builder Association of Metro Denver, obtained by InsideRealEstateNews.com.
“The big picture is that this is sort of a necessary
evil,” said economist Patty Silverstein, principal
of Littleton-based Development Research Partners. “As
painful as this is for builders and developers, we have
to see a stop in the increase of the supply, in order
to see improvements in the market. While I think that
this year will continue to be slow, I think we can see
some improvements next year.”
In addition to a lack of demand, banks also have been
unwilling or unable to lend, which also has crimped
the ability of many small builders, she said.
Whatever the reason for the downturn, one thing is
clear – the collapse in Denver-area construction
activity last year was unprecedented.
“Historically, if we look over the last 30 years,
we have issued an average of 17,000 permits per year,”
Silverstein said. The market peaked in 2000, with 28,310
permits issued. And to put last year’s activity
into perspective, consider that it was a 78 percent
drop from the 15,890 permits issued in 1980. Since then,
the population of the area has grown by about 70 percent.
Overall permit activity in the Denver area has dropped
from the previous year every year since 2005. Permit
activity is down 88 percent from its 28,310 peak in
2001 and is down 77 percent from 2007, when 14,729 permits
were issued.
The biggest hit last year was to the apartment market.
Permits were issued for only 438 apartment units last
year, a 90 percent drop from the 4,413 in 2008. Jeff
Hawks, co-owner of the Denver office of Apartment Realty
Advisors, said that rental rates in the Denver area
need to rise by 20 percent to 30 percent to justify
new construction. Because inflation of rents does not
appear to be in cards anytime soon, especially given
the poor state of the economy, there is no need to build
more market-rate apartment communities in the metro
area for four or five years, he argues.
What little appreciation people have seen in their
homes recently, in large part is because builders are
not increasing the supply, noted Tom Clark, executive
vice president of the Metro Denver Economic Development
Corp.
On one hand, that is good for individual home owners,
“although sometimes we view affordable housing
as an economic advantage,” for attracting companies
to the area and encouraging companies to stay, he noted.
Hawks noted that unlike the mid and late 1980s, when
Denver was mired in a recession because of the collapse
of oil prices and an economy that was not diversified,
“now there is no place to go.” Indeed, people
continue to move to Colorado with the hope that our
economy will recover faster than other parts of the
country, Clark said.
Still, the construction industry coming to a standstill
hits the overall economy hard, Clark said.
“Construction is sometimes a leading indicator
and sometimes a lagging indicator, depending on what
kind of recovery you are having,” Clark said.
“But when you look at the unemployment rate in
construction approaching the levels we have not seen
(since the Great Depression) of the 1930s, it has a
huge impact. A large percentage of the people in the
construction industry get paid well and they turn over
their money very quickly in the marketplace. It has
a huge multiplier associated with it, because the housing
market touches so many other parts of our economy.”
In years past, Denver has used huge construction projects
to pull itself out of its economic doldrums.
“Historically, we built ourselves out of a crisis.
We built DIA, and the Colorado Convention Center,”
as well as Coors Field and Invesco Field,” Clark
noted. “Unfortunately, when the financial institutions
are in meltdown and people have lost 30 percent of their
net worth, it is hard to get excited to fund these massive
projects.”
One bright spot is the redevelopment of Union Station
as part of FasTracks, thanks to the federal government
planning to provide a $300 million loan. “The
federal government did its part in that instance,”
Clark said. “But what we really need from Washington
is to point which direction we are going. The federal
government has never been very good at execution, but
it is usually very good at finger pointing. There is
no finger pointing, at least not in the direction they
expect us to head. If they did that on health care,
for example, companies could pull out their calculators
and look at their expected profits and losses. But there
is no fingers pointing us in a direction that will get
us out of this mess. I blame both Republicans and Democrats.
I think Congress should be ashamed of itself. There
is no reaching across the aisle to accomplish what needs
to be done.”
As grim as it is, it is far worse in other parts of
the country, Clark noted.
“At least we’re not Phoenix, or other markets,
where a great number of people have experienced huge
losses in their home values,” Clark said.
What ultimately will get the construction industry
back on its feet is jobs, especially well-paying ones,
he said.
“Construction always follows jobs,” Clark
said.
Contact John Rebchook at JRCHOOK@gmail.com or 303-945-6865.
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Leonard & Associates, Inc. All rights reserved.
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