The 18 Cities Poised for Economic Growth

Florida Economic Growth

For the past few years, oil towns have dominated the ranks of the fastest-growing economies in America. Now that the energy boom is fading, a new leader is emerging: Retirement communities in Florida that are buoyed by a surge in baby boomers.

Naples, Florida, topped the list of metropolitan areas that are expected to see the most economic growth next year, according to an analysis of data in a new report from the U.S. Conference of Mayors prepared by IHS Global Insight. The economy there will grow 4.9 percent in 2016, according to the forecasts. The Villages, a sprawling senior community that has already been the fastest-growing city by population for two straight years, ranked third. The map below shows how metro areas in Florida made up half of the top 18 performers.
Florida Front runners

1. Naples/Marco Island
2. Sebring
3. The Villages
4. Cape Coral/Fort Myers

Florida Economic Growth

In 2014, the front runners consisted of mostly energy patch areas, many of which will probably end up as some of the worst-performing economies next year. Nowhere is the shift clearer than in Midland, Texas, which saw the best economic growth in the country in 2014 (11.9 percent) according to the report’s data. The expectation is that it will rank dead last (3.2 percent contraction) in forecasts for 2016. Other areas that are also expected to struggle include Midland’s neighbor Odessa and Casper, Wyoming.

With these previous oil and gas hubs tumbling down the ranks, it makes room for Florida’s metro economies to take their places at the top of the list in 2016.

Other metropolitan areas slated for growth in 2016 include greater San Jose, California, which makes up the heart of Silicon Valley; Austin, Texas; and Provo, Utah.

Bloomberg.com June 2015

Cash Buyers – Sarasota-Manatee No. 2

Cash Buyers SarasotaCash Buyers

Cash on the table remains the preferred method of payment for home buyers in Southwest Florida.

The Sarasota-Manatee region ranked second among the 100 largest U.S. metro areas for cash buyers in April, according to a recent report by data provider CoreLogic.  The two-county region ranks second among major U.S. metropolitan areas for the highest share of cash buyers of single-family homes and condominiums.

Cash buyers have dominated the Sarasota-Manatee real estate market for several years, even leading the nation for the top share in April. But no-loan buying has actually slowed down, as 58.1 percent of home sales were closed with cash in May 2014.

Nationwide, all-cash buying dropped to 24.6 percent in May, its lowest level since November 2009, RealtyTrac reported.

  • Florida led the nation with a cash sales share of 51.4 percent, CoreLogic said
  • Alabama was second at 48.5 percent, followed by West Virginia at 48.3 percent and New York at 45.4 percent.
  • The West Palm Beach-Boca Raton-Delray Beach region posted the nation’s highest share of cash sales at 59.1 percent. Cape Coral-Fort Myers was third at 58.1 percent, and Fort Lauderdale-Pompano Beach-Deerfield Beach was fifth at 56.9 percent.
  • Syracuse, New York, reported the lowest share of cash sales at 11.0 percent.

Locally, Realtors say smaller investors have become key players in home sales while large institutional investors — who commanded the market during its early rebound — have stepped back. Retiring baby boomers who have sold homes up North also are paying cash for homes here.

“As housing transitions from an investor-driven, cash-is-king market to one more dependent on traditional buyers, sales volume has been increasing over the last few months and is on track in 2015 to hit the highest level we’ve seen since 2006,” said RealtyTrac vice president Daren Blomquist.

Institutional investors — those that buy at least 10 properties a year — accounted for just 1.7 percent of home and condo sales in Sarasota-Manatee in May, down from 4.8 percent one year earlier.

The share of distressed sales — homes in some stage of foreclosure — also has declined from 24.8 percent to 15.5 percent of all sales over the year.

Realtors say the region is in a sellers’ market, with high demand and a dwindling supply of existing homes for sale.

In Sarasota and Manatee, the median sales price for homes and condos was $155,000 in May, down 1 percent for the year.

But as usual, distressed sales pull down those numbers. Non-distressed homes sold for a median $180,000, or 9 percent ahead of last year, while distressed properties changed hands for $105,000, a 9 percent drop.

“Distressed sales in May represented a significantly smaller share of a growing home sales pie as an increasing number of non-distressed sellers continued to cash out on the equity they’ve gained over the last three years of rising home prices,” Blomquist said.

“But those distressed sales are still acting as a drag on home prices, selling at a median price that is 43 percent below the median price of a non-distressed sale — the biggest gap we’ve seen since we began tracking that distressed discount in January 2006,” he added.

Herald Tribune July 2015

Independence Day Celebrations in Sarasota

july4th-SarasotaUpcoming Independence Day Celebrations July 4, 2015

july4th

From downtown Sarasota and spectacular fireworks over Sarasota Bay, to Siesta Key and Longboat Key, live music, food, a parade and more will assure there’s something fun for everyone to enjoy.

 

Powerboats by the Bay at Centennial Park
Part of the Suncoast Offshore Grand Prix Boat Festival
10 a.m. – 7 p.m.
Free admission and live entertainment

 

An American Tapestry
Gloria Musicae
4:30 p.m. First United Methodist Church, 104 S. Pineapple Ave

 

Fireworks Spectacular over Sarasota Bayfireworks - Downtown Sarasota 
Bayfront Park and Island Park.
9:00 p.m.

 

The 25th Annual 4th of July Fireworks Display over Siesta Key
On Siesta Key’s magnificent beaches – spectacular fireworks over the Gulf of Mexico.

 

Tropical Sarasota Fourth of July
Marie Selby Botanical Gardens
Get ready for Barbecue and Ice Cream
6 p.m.
Bring chairs/blankets to view the Fireworks over Sarasota Bay

 

Longboat Key Freedom Fest Parade
9 a.m
Bay Isles Road
Kids, pets and decorated bicycles adorn the parade. Food, games for the children and more at Bicentennial Park

 

Sarasota Sailing Squadron’s Liberty Day Regatta and Family Festival
City Island
5:00 p.m.
Great family fun with a water slide, live music and more followed by the Bayfront Fireworks

Sarasota Downtown Development Progress

Downtown Sarasota Real Estate Development

Numerous projects are on the horizon and in varying stages of progress for downtown Sarasota. See the overview of Sarasota Condos, Townhomes and Hotels under development.

DowntownSarasotaDevelopment-1

Van Wezel Beats St. Armands as Tourism Destination

VanWezel-1

SARASOTA – Move over, St. Armands Circle. The Van Wezel Performing Arts Hall ranked as the No. 1 attraction in Sarasota County from January through March — the so-called “high season” — for the first time, the county’s tourism agency says.

St. Armands Circle — Lido Key’s premier destination for shopping and dining, just steps away from Sarasota’s sugary white sand beach and emerald Gulf waters — was beat out by the Van Wezel as the most visited attraction.

Virginia Haley, president of Visit Sarasota, the county’s tourism agency, credits the change to the Van Wezel’s impressive programming this year.

“Every show at the Van Wezel this year was awesome,” Haley said. “It’s very exciting, as we’ve really pushed the cultural amenities of Sarasota in our marketing plans.”
Visit Sarasota regularly conducts visitor-intercept studies in which it asks tourists to list which attractions they visited during their stay.

It was a close competition.
Van Wezel was at the top, with 36 percent of visitors in the three-month period, while St. Armands Circle was around 35 percent. The new Mall at University Town Center was 30 percent. “I think the key is that the Van Wezel offers diversity,” said Mary Bensel, executive director of the Van Wezel. “We’re showing something different here every night that is of interest to all sorts of people, from concerts that appeal to younger people, to music and dance and our educational programs.”

The hall held performances of the musical “Jersey Boys” and more recently comedian Kathy Griffin.
The Van Wezel also offers performances by the Sarasota Orchestra and Sarasota Ballet and is home to the Ringling College of Art & Design’s Town Hall series.

Other statistics

Tourists from the Baltimore and Washington, D.C., region came to Sarasota County in record numbers this year, overtaking New York as the No. 1 source of visitors to Sarasota, the tourism agency reported.
Nearly 26,000 visitors from the Mid-Atlantic region came to Sarasota County from January through March, thanks in part to the Baltimore Orioles, which plays the spring training season at Ed Smith Stadium.

The number of visitors this year increased 128 percent from the 11,000 people who came from Baltimore and Washington in the same period last year.

“The sustained investment from our partnership with the Baltimore Orioles has really paid off,” Haley said. “This performance in the Mid-Atlantic region shows the benefits of the Orioles providing more than a million dollars of advertising and promotion annually in the D.C. and Baltimore area each of the last six years. It is great to see it be this successful.”

The 110,000 fans who attended the 2015 spring training season was a record for the franchise.

“The breadth and economic impact of the marketing partnership between VSC and the Orioles continues to be unprecedented in Major League Baseball,” Orioles spokesman Greg Bader said. “Our goal has always been to bring visitors from the Mid-Atlantic region to the greater Sarasota area, but we never imagined they would so quickly constitute the largest number of visitors to the region during the winter months.”

The Orioles’ overall economic impact on the region is more than $59 million, an analysis by Sarasota County government concluded.

 

Sarasota Herald Tribune May 8, 2015

Sotheby’s International Realty Network Reports Significant Gains for 2014

Sotheby’s International Global Growth 2014

Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC reported that in 2014 its affiliated brokers and sales professionals achieved $70 billion in U.S. home sale transaction volume (transaction sides multiplied by average sale price). This is the highest sales volume performance in the history of the brand’s franchise system, and marks a 17% increase from the prior year. Driven largely by an 11 percent gain in transaction sides, the growth experienced by Sotheby’s International Realty far outpaced the overall U.S. housing market as compared to the one percent increase in sales volume and a three percent decrease in home sales reported by the National Association of Realtors®. Watch the video

Global Growth

The Sotheby’s International Realty brand also reported growth in its global network, which now encompasses 60 countries and territories worldwide. At year-end, the network totaled approximately 760 offices, a gain of 8.5 percent, and more than 16,570 sales associates, up 14 percent.

The Sotheby’s International Realty network grew substantially in 2014,” said Philip White, president and chief executive officer, Sotheby’s International Realty Affiliates LLC.  “The luxury sector continues to outperform the overall market, which reflects the value consumers see in high-end real estate to grow their wealth, as well as the increasing level of international buyers in key luxury markets.”

Outside the United States, the Sotheby’s International Realty brand expanded its network in 2014 to provide its real estate services in: Belgium, Beijing, Belize, the Canary Islands, Luxembourg, India, Hainan, St. Martin, Poland and St. Moritz.  The Sotheby’s International Realty brand also added 13 new residential real estate firms and 45 net new offices to its network across the United States, including the following markets: Houston, Texas; Steamboat Springs, Colo.; Santa Rosa Beach, Fla.; Sunset, S.C.; Richmond, Va.; Marblehead, Mass.; Wilmington and Topsail Island, N.C.; Kailua, Hawaii; Woodinville, Wash.; Malibu, Calif.; Lancaster, Pa.; Brookline and Jamaica Plain, Mass.; and Pleasanton, Calif.

In 2015 and for the eighth year in a row, the Sotheby’s International Realty brand won Franchise Business Review’s Best in Category for Real Estate Franchisee Satisfaction award.  In addition to its real estate ranking, the brand in 2015 moved to first in the overall top 50 from fourth in 2014, and first among the Top 50 “Systems with 250 or more units,” up from third in 2014.

Last year also marked the launch of the Sotheby’s International Realty Global Referral system, which was designed to streamline the transfer of referrals electronically within the brand’s worldwide network.  The Global Referral system, which the brand developed with Immobel, allows Sotheby’s International Realty network members to assign referrals, manage them through closing and run detailed reports.  The system also features language translation and currency conversion.

Marketing

From a marketing perspective, the brand’s 2014 campaign delivered more than 800 million impressions.  At the core of the Sotheby’s International Realty 2014 strategy was its relationships with pre-eminent media powerhouses in both the print and online arenas including: The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, The Telegraph Media Group, Google, Architectural Digest, Bloomberg.com, the Hong Kong Tatler and the Financial Times, developed to showcase unique properties from the brand’s worldwide network.

Sotheby’s International Realty listings are marketed on the sothebysrealty.com global website.  In addition to the referral opportunities and widened exposure generated from this source, the firm’s brokers and their clients benefit from an association with the Sotheby’s auction house and worldwide Sotheby’s International Realty marketing programs.  Each office is independently owned and operated.

 

Home Buying Season in Full Swing – Downtown Sarasota

Southwest Florida’s home buying season is in full swing — Home-buyers-1and it’s shaping up to be one of the busiest ever.

Despite rapidly rising home prices and lingering inventory woes, homes from Parrish to Punta Gorda continue to change hands at the fastest clip on record, and most industry watchers don’t foresee it slowing any time soon.

The surging activity in February comes during the busiest time of the year for real estate in Florida, with snowbirds and vacationers in town, some scouting for homes.

Coupled with pent-up demand from the Great Recession, and restored stock wealth for many retirement buyers, the market is poised for another robust spring, area Realtors say.

People are able to sell their homes up north and plan retirement,” said Gloria Weed, branch manager of Michael Saunders & Co.’s office in Lakewood Ranch. “I have lived here for 30 years, and I have just never seen so many people here during season. Just look at the traffic.”

The more people who’re here, the more who like, the more who decide they want to live here and buy homes here,” Weed said.

  • Agents sold 1,875 existing homes and condominiums during February in Sarasota, Manatee and Charlotte counties, according to figures released Monday from the industry trade group Florida Realtors.

That was up 12.8 percent from a steady January and 8.8 percent ahead of the same time in 2014, which finished as the best year for real estate activity in history.

Because housing contracts typically take 30 to 60 days to close, these figures represent deals that were likely first inked in December or early January, the start of the region’s season.

Those existing sales also do not count new homes, which also are selling at post-recession bests.

It’s the continued growth and exposure in other areas,” said Peter Crowley, broker and co-owner of Re/Max Alliance Group. “You couple that with miserable winters up North, and I just believe we’re the beneficiary. The buyer demand continues to be very strong.”

Rising prices

That swelling demand has pushed the median price for a single-family home in the North Port-Bradenton-Sarasota area up 12.5 percent over the year to $225,000 in February. The median is the midpoint: half the homes sold for more, half for less.

Of the Florida metropolitan areas where home data is tracked, only Port St. Lucie, Jacksonville and Lakeland saw their single-family housing prices climb faster.

Condominium prices in this region similarly rose by 6.8 percent of the year to a $175,000 February median.

The recent price gains have sparked fears of housing affordability for working- class families, with average rents similarly growing at historic levels, while worker wages generally have remained stagnant.

The Federal Reserve also is expected to ease its bond buying strategy this year and raise interest rates, which could begin to impact the cost of mortgages, which have remained a key selling point.

The average fixed interest rate for a 30-year, conventional mortgage in February rose slightly to 3.71 percent, but still remains historically low, according to Freddie Mac.

Some analysts remain skeptical on the industry’s future. They point to lingering foreclosures, investor impacts, tight financing availability and poor wages.

Some also question whether there is enough full-time owner occupiers to support the market’s sustained recovery. “There’s a tremendous amount of hype in the marketplace,” said Jack Mc-Cabe, a Florida real estate consultant. “We all know what happened the last time we saw this. I think we’re in a transition stage, and I really believe we will be back to a buyer’s market by the end of the year.”

The bigger picture

The sales trend was similar across the Sunshine State, where Realtors sold 26,961 existing homes in February, up 15.3 percent from January and a 15.2 percent increase from the same time last year.

The statewide price for a single-family home reached a February median of $179,995, up about 9 percent over the year, according to Florida Realtors.

Across the country, home sales improved as inventory shortages pushed price growth to its fastest pace in a year.

  • Existing home sales rose 1.2 percent from January to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 4.88 million in February, which was also 4.7 percent higher than a year ago — the fifth consecutive month of annual gains, according to data released Monday by the National Association of Realtors.

The median home price last month also jumped nearly 8 percent to $202,600, the largest national increase since February 2013.

Those improvements were driven largely by a stock of existing homes for sales that remains below a year ago at a 4.6-month supply, which measures the time it would take to deplete the inventory at the current sales pace if no new homes were added to the market.

Insufficient supply appears to be hampering prospective buyers in several areas of the country and is hiking prices to near unsuitable levels,” NAR Chief Economist Lawrence Yun said in a statement. “Stronger price growth is a boon for homeowners looking to build additional equity, but it continues to be an obstacle for current buyers looking to close before rates rise.”

With all indications pointing to a rate increase from the Federal Reserve this year — perhaps as early as this summer — affordability concerns could heighten as home prices and rents both continue to exceed wages.”

It’s the continued growth and exposure in other areas. You couple that with miserable winters up North, and I just believe we’re the beneficiary. The buyer demand continues to be very strong.”

Peter Crowley, broker and co-owner of Re/Max Alliance Group

Herald Tribune 3/24/2015

Bayfront 20:20 Success

Bayfront20It is with great pride and appreciation that we can announce that the Sarasota City Commission unanimously and enthusiastically adopted the Bayfront 20:20 vision statement and implementation principles last night that you helped create.

We are extremely humbled and honored by the support you have all given us over this initial phase.

Our volunteer chairman Michael Klauber addressed the commission saying “with your support, tonight will be remembered as a moment at which history was made in Sarasota.”

And indeed, it was!

Commissioner Suzanne Atwell noted last night, “I’ve never seen anything that has exhibited such collective political will as this initiative. This is the beginning of a beautiful friendship with extraordinary vision for Sarasota.”

Commissioner Eileen Normile added, “I’d like to thank you all – you’ve done a tremendous job and have been the nexus of the community. You have jump started this effort and I don’t know where we’d be if you hadn’t done this.”

Up next, the commission will evaluate our recommendation to establish a technical working group to guide the process as it moves forward and to form a road map for the future. This group, comprised of key city staff, technical experts and stakeholders, will be tasked with providing advice to the commission. The goal being — to develop a concise technical knowledge base for the city-owned property, to coincide with the assessment efforts of the Van Wezel Foundation and Sarasota Orchestra.

The Sarasota Orchestra and the Van Wezel will complete their cultural needs assessment by late spring, providing a clearer picture of how they fit into that road map.

Moving forward, we will continue to need your support, guidance and engagement in this process. As we celebrate this historical achievement, we are thankful to the commission for endorsing our vision – vision – and we look forward to creating an iconic legacy on the Sarasota Bayfront that future generations can enjoy.

This was not the effort of one person or one organization. This was the effort of an entire community of dedicated stakeholders and people vested in the future of our great region. We can’t wait to see what comes next and vow to keep you posted and informed every step of the way!

Downtown Sarasota Developments – New Construction

Echelon on Palm – Downtown Sarasota New Construction

downtown-sarasota-by-nightDowntown Sarasota’s construction boom will continue well into 2015, the result of newly unveiled plans that include another luxury condominium tower and the first new office building in eight years.

In the larger of the two developments, the Ronto Group of Naples plans to build an 18-story condo tower between Gulf Stream and South Palm avenues, investing at least $20 million to compete in an increasingly crowded market for new residential units.

Veteran local developer Mark Kauffman, meanwhile, is preparing to construct a $4.7 million, four-story office building called Centerplex at Ringling Boulevard and Golf Street.

For Kauffman, whose properties include Courthouse Centre and the Hollywood 20/Main Plaza complex downtown, the offices become the latest in a series of new projects in or around downtown.

He already is building Payne Park Plaza, a $1.5 million office and retail development on South Washington Boulevard, near Morrill Street.

The three projects join a post-recession resurgence in downtown construction, with condos, hotels and retail space sprouting from the business district to the bayfront. Ronto Group plans 17 units on a one-third-acre site called Echelon on Palm, executive vice president and co-owner Anthony Solomon said Tuesday.

While a number of new condos are coming online downtown and on nearby barrier islands, Solomon says demand is sufficient for more. “The economy is doing a lot better,” he said. “People are looking for new design and new product, and it’s a good time to launch something.”

The company has purchased a parcel at 624 S. Palm, site of the La Palme Royale bed-and-breakfast, and in March will acquire another parcel at 621 Gulf Stream Ave.

Sixteen floors of the modern design building will contain a single unit, Solomon said, with just over 4,000 square feet of living area. One of the units will be a two-level townhouse on the first and second floors. Parking will be located on the first two floors.

Prices will range from $2.2 million to $4 million, he said, with an average of $3 million. Its penthouse will be the priciest of the units.

The company wants to pre sell at least half the residences before starting construction next summer. Build-out is scheduled to take about 16 months. A sales office will open at the site next month.

This is the first venture in Sarasota for Ronto, founded in 1967 by Jack Solomon and now co-managed with his son. The company has completed more than 10,000 high-rise units, 2,000 single-family homes, several shopping plazas and a hotel, according to its website.

“What attracted us to Sarasota is that it is very similar to Naples in demographics,” Anthony Solomon said. “The site and its views are amazing, and the location is incredible.”

But Echelon on Palm will join a growing field of new projects underway or planned around downtown. Among them: the $120 million Vue on the bayfront, with 141 condos and a 255 hotel rooms; the $31 million mixed-use One Palm Avenue, with 130 hotel rooms and 139 apartments; the $19 million Jewel on Main Street, with 18 units; and the $6 million “Q,” which contains 39 condos on Ringling Boulevard.

Kauffman has filed plans with the city for 30,000 square feet of office space at Ringling and Golf, which would become the first free-standing office project to open downtown since the Great Recession.

“They wanted new, and the locations are pretty incredible for both of them,” said Kauffman, who also developed the P.F. Chang’s China Bistro on Osprey Avenue downtown and redeveloped an office building at U.S. 41 and Siesta Drive housing Fleming’s Steakhouse.

The planned buildings come, however, as the market for new Class A office space remains soft and financing for new office projects remains elusive. During the third quarter, for example, the 2.5 million square feet of existing office space in downtown Sarasota had a 12 percent vacancy. In all of 2013, too, there was net absorption of just 17,532 square feet of office space downtown, according to figures compiled by the Economic Development Corp. of Sarasota County.

Commercial brokers say downtown landlords are now asking about $25 to $27 per square foot in gross rents. “The numbers don’t make sense yet,” said local commercial real estate broker Ian Black. “The market has to turn so that demand will exceed supply.”

Both the Echelon and the Centerplex projects are scheduled to go before Sarasota’s Development Review Committee Wednesday 12/17.

Payne Park Plaza on South Washington Boulevard would contain 8,300 square feet of office and retail space, as well, according to plans. Both commercial projects will be developed on a build-to-suit basis, with a bank occupying two floors in the Centerplex development and a financial firm committing to Payne Park Plaza.

HeraldTribune 12/16/2014

Sarasota Construction Projects – Sarasota Lifestyles

Downtown Sarasota Construction Projects – Development News

The Sarasota housing market continues toSarasota Bay View show signs of strength: In November, at least three housing projects totaling more than 400 units have emerged in neighborhoods near the heart of the Downtown Sarasota. Currently in various stages of development, the projects have the potential to leave a significant mark on the city’s landscape.

ROSEMARY DISTRICT
1401 Fruitville Road

With the Rosemary Residential Overlay District in place, a second developer is seeking to take advantage of the density bonuses created by the new regulations.

Framework Group LLC, a Tampa-based developer, is proposing a five-story, 228-unit apartment complex along Fruitville Road between Central Avenue and Lemon Avenue. With the project, called Sarasota Flats, the group said it hopes to appeal to a broadening market interested in highly amenitized luxury apartments.

The 3.05-acre site is located within the Rosemary Residential Overlay District, which allows for housing projects with a density of 75 units per acre — three times the previous cap. Philip Smith, president of Framework Group, said the incentive to develop in the area was a significant draw.

DOWNTOWN
711 S. Palm Ave.

On Wednesday, the developer behind a planned five-story development on south Palm Avenue appeared before the city’s Development Review Committee.

The condominium complex would replace a single-family residential home at 711 S. Palm Ave., subject to demolition approval.

With 15 units across four residential stories, the development was geared more toward full-time residents., with a goal to attract the end user who will spend significant time here and live here rather than just spending a couple of weeks in Sarasota.

Although the project is in its early stages, concern is already brewing among adjacent property owners about how their sightlines might be affected if the building is not set further back from the sidewalk.

Seaward Development is currently working on plans to bring forward to the city as soon as next month, with a targeted construction date as early as next spring.

DOWNTOWN
1455 Second St.

A site plan has been in place for 1455 Second St. for six years, but the fate of the project has regularly been in question.

On Monday, the City Commission may have helped keep the project afloat, allowing the developer to forgo required payments to an Affordable Housing and Transit Development Fund.

The site plan, approved under the now-expired Downtown Residential Overlay District, calls for a 10-story building with 168 residential units and 16,400 square feet of retail space on the 0.84-acre parcel. Earlier this year, property owner Jesse Biter said he was uncertain whether he could move forward with his plans without another partner coming aboard.

Since then, Carter Acquisitions LLC has agreed to partner with Biter Enterprises in developing the project. Before an agreement is finalized, however, the group sought to avoid the payments to the housing and transit funds as was stipulated following site-plan approval.

Since that approval, the plans have been modified so more than 130 of the apartments are 1,250 square feet or smaller. Bill Merrill, who represented Carter Acquisitions at Monday’s meeting, said the intent of the DROD regulations was to create smaller, more attainable housing units; the required payments to housing and transit were triggered by the number of units larger than 1,250 square feet.

Before the 3-2 vote to forgo the payment, Vice Mayor Susan Chapman questioned whether the smaller apartments qualified as attainable. Jerome Hagley, executive vice president with Carter Acquisitions, said one-bedroom units should range from $1,100 to $1,500, while two-bedroom apartments will be priced from $1,800 to $2,200.