Re: historical examples of coho development in falling market?
From: Ann Zabaldo (zabaldoearthlink.net)
Date: Tue, 3 Mar 2009 09:00:36 -0800 (PST)
Hello all --

I'm not an economist but to my knowledge ... we haven't had a "sustained" falling economy since 1983 w/ the exception of some short "bear markets" in the early 90's (remember the S&L bailout? Seems like a cakewalk compared to this) and the dot.com bust in the early 2000's. All of which we recovered from. But this situation is very different from any of those. (I'm sure the more knowledgeable among us will correct me on my memory of the above "down" markets.)

You are right to raise these concerns early in the development process. Appraisals can be a problem. When houses here at Takoma Village appraised lower than the sales price people did bring more cash to the table. But that was at a time when no money down was available and the houses the people were selling were worth more and selling for more than the one they were buying in cohousing.

I would suggest getting your take out mortgage money lined up in advance. That's one thing the developer, Don Tucker of Eco Housing had in place from the beginning. At the second orientation for Takoma Village waaay back in 1998 he walked in and the lenders walked in behind him. Ditto for Eastern Village. I worked on both projects and what I learned is that building a community in which people can't get loans is a sure fired way for the development to fail. So always have the mortgage money lined up.

Work to educate one or two appraisers so that when the time comes they know what they are looking at.

As far as marketing and outreach for members ... what are you "selling?" If you are just selling housing then you will be competing w/ the surrounding home prices. If you are selling a sustainable community oriented life style and you have a solid vision for your community you will have an edge. The old advertising adage still applies: it ain't the steak ... it's the sizzle!

O ... and while I'm on my soapbox ... a community must be economically, socially and environmentally sustainable to be truly sustainable. It's a three-legged stool as one of my biz partners continually reminds me. One of the legs gets longer than the other two and over it goes ...

Wishing you the best in brining cohousing to NYC!  It's such a natural!

Best --

Ann Zabaldo
Takoma Village
Washington, DC
Principal, The Cohousing Collaborative
McLean, VA

PH: 703 663 3911
FAX 202 291 8594







On Mar 2, 2009, at 2:53 PM, Kristi Barlow wrote:



This list is such a great resource, thank you all, and for the first
time I find myself with a question I cannot answer through the archives.

Here in Brooklyn we are well-poised to take advantage of the changing
market conditions in terms of purchasing property at a good price (and
from developers that would otherwise not be interested in selling to a
cohousing group).

However, at the same time, we are concerned about attracting future
members to a project whose prices are likely to looking increasingly
high as the surrounding market declines. Our costs will not drop while
prices of surrounding new condos (and existing homes) most certainly
will.

My question for the list today: is there historical precedent for
successful cohousing development in a sustained falling market? I
would really appreciate hearing from any who pulled it off (or
failed), especially regarding building membership under such
conditions, and what happened when appraisals came in low (did most
people manage to rustle up the extra cash to make up the difference?
did many people drop out at the last minute because they couldn't get
enough of a mortgage? etc).

thank you in advance,
Kristi Barlow, Member of Brooklyn Cohousing (kristi [at] brooklyncohousing.org
)


_________________________________________________________________
Cohousing-L mailing list -- Unsubscribe, archives and other info at:
http://www.cohousing.org/cohousing-L/




Results generated by Tiger Technologies Web hosting using MHonArc.