Fewer Mortgages Used on Condos in Washington, DC Housing Market
The end of the condo craze is leaving real estate developers looking for other options.
Developers in the Washington housing market are dumping their proposals to build condominiums and switching to apartments as a glut of new and old condos slows sales.
In the latest move, a project in Takoma Park originally designed as condominiums, then canceled, is being reborn as an apartment complex.
Home builder Centex Homes started selling condo units for its Pavilions at Takoma in November, beginning in the low $200,000s for studios one block from the Takoma Park Metro station.
Last month, Centex Homes suddenly canceled the condo project, citing unfavorable market conditions and a lack of home loan demand.
The company sold the partially completed project Feb. 14 to Gables Residential, a McLean real estate investment trust.
“I guess the condo market got a little bit saturated,” said Ronny Salameh, Centex Homes’ division manager for Maryland and the District. “Until all that inventory goes away, it really slows down the condo market. It opens up for the rental market.”
When the housing boom peaked in 2005, condominiums made up 50 percent of the 354,000 new housing units being built nationally, up from 20 percent two years earlier, according to the National Association of Home Builders. This year, the association says condos will make up about 30 percent of new housing units.
Condominiums still are selling in the Washington area, but they are being bought by mortgage applicants who plan to use them as their primary residences instead of investment properties that offer a quick buck when they are re-sold a few years later.
“People are buying them for the correct reason today,” said Grant Montgomery, vice president of real estate research firm Delta Associates. “They’re a home first and an investment second. During the craze, I think that was inverted.”
The median price of condos rose 57 percent nationwide between 2001 and 2004, according to the National Association of Realtors. Single-family homes rose 25 percent in value in the same period.
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SOURCE: The Washington Times

