2 townhome projects on way
More than 70 units planned downtown near Farmers Market
08:50 AM CST on Thursday, February 9, 2006
By STEVE BROWN / The Dallas Morning News
Two new townhome projects promise to transform the neighborhood around downtown Dallas' Farmers Market.
Builders Perry Homes and J.G. Moore & Co. have filed plans with the city of Dallas to build more than 70 townhouses on Central Expressway near the Farmers Market.
The townhouses will be constructed on land purchased from Houston developer Camden Property Trust, which has been developing apartments near the market since 1999. Camden also built and sold 17 townhouses on the north side of Canton Street at Central.
Developer Jim Moore has purchased the block to the west on Canton where he will construct 28 townhouses.
"We will be under construction in about four months," Mr. Moore said Tuesday. "We are going to be in the $300,000s price range."
His J.G. Moore & Co. built the award-winning Sundance Row townhouses in Uptown and is currently building other projects in central city neighborhoods.
Perry Homes – which is one of the area's busiest townhouse builders – plans to construct its townhouse community on a vacant block at Central and Marilla, according to filings with the City Plan Commission.
Officials with Perry Homes did not respond to requests for information about the project's timing or cost.
Camden Property has spent more than $100 million developing land east of the Farmers Market into an apartment community. The developer just completed almost 300 units in its project east of Central.
And Camden is negotiating to sell more land around the Farmers Market.
The plan to add two townhouse developments will help the area grow as a residential neighborhood, said housing analyst Mike Puls with Foley & Puls.
"It adds credibility to have more than one developer building there," Mr. Puls said.
He said with all the condo and townhouse construction in Uptown, areas such as the Farmers Market are becoming alternatives for developers.
"We've speculated that something like 100 acres of townhome land have been consumed in Uptown in the last few years," Mr. Puls said. "There is hardly no dirt left in Uptown for these kinds of projects."
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Dallas Real Estate
Haves, have-nots split housing market
Smaller mortgages falling to foreclosures as high-end sales climb
11:20 PM CST on Friday, January 20, 2006
By BRENDAN M. CASE, STEVE BROWN and IEVA M. AUGSTUMS / The Dallas Morning News
In a healthy local housing market, a sign of trouble has appeared: More people are losing their homes to foreclosure than at any time since the Texas real estate bust of the 1980s.
The causes run from bad luck to bad financial decisions: job loss, divorce, a health crisis, skyrocketing energy bills, out-of-control credit card debt, or a mortgage payment that turned out to be unaffordable.
But there also seems to be a sharpening contrast between real estate markets at either end of the economic ladder.
As residential foreclosures jumped 30 percent from a year ago in North Texas, the average mortgage on foreclosed houses fell to $129,000, compared with almost $146,000 a year ago.
Meanwhile, home sales set records last year, with a strong 20 percent increase in sales of homes priced over $400,000. But there was a 4 percent decrease in sales of homes priced below $110,000.
"What we're seeing develop in the marketplace is the haves and the have-nots," said Craig Jarrell, who heads up the Dallas operations of Pulaski Mortgage Co.
"Either you've got money and you've got a job and you're buying a new house and you're rocking along," he said. "Or you're underwater and can't buy a new house, and can't afford the one you're in and you're going into foreclosure."
Newer mortgages, too
That's not the whole picture, of course. The foreclosure hammer also recently fell on an Addison home valued at $1.5 million, a North Dallas house valued at nearly $870,000 and a Coppell property worth about $430,000.
But Connie Zetterlund, a Coldwell Banker Residential agent who specializes in foreclosed property sales, says she's noticed increasing signs of trouble at lower-priced properties.
"The price ranges are a little lower than last year," she said. "There are a ton of foreclosures out there right now."
That's not the only trend. Ms. Zetterlund has also noticed more trouble among newer mortgages, the ones acquired after the economic downturn earlier this decade.
"I'm seeing a lot of properties bought in 2004 and already going to foreclosure," she said.
In a fix
Consumer Credit Counseling Service of Greater Dallas has seen an influx of people coming in with housing concerns.
"With the low interest rate, people are biting off more than they can chew," said Gail Cunningham, the company's vice president of business relations. "They've been extended a loan that really eats up a significant part of their income."
Even some mortgage lenders, worried about rising foreclosures, warn would-be homebuyers against borrowing too much.
"People a lot of times are getting themselves way overextended, and they're taking some nontraditional products," said Gary Akright, a mortgage broker in Dallas with Dominion Mortgage Corp.
One reason is the range of newfangled products such as interest-only mortgages and certain kinds of adjustable rate mortgages. Designed to hold down costs in the early years, payments on such loans can rise sharply later.
Proponents of such mortgages say they help homebuyers in places where home values are rising quickly, or people who plan to live in a home for just a few years.
But think hard about future costs before taking out a mortgage, says Bonnie Peterson, the director of education and marketing at Consumer Credit Counseling Service of North Central Texas, which serves Collin County.
Ms. Peterson, who is having a house built in Princeton, recently went through the mortgage application process and found that lenders were eager to provide her with more money than she wanted to borrow.
"I was qualified for more, but I didn't think I could afford it," she said. "I want to have enough money to live the life I want to live."
More than half the potential foreclosure victims Ms. Peterson sees at work are able to save their homes, especially when they seek financial advice early, she says.
"A lot of people don't want to talk to anyone, or they wait too long," she said.
Bankruptcy option
Another option is bankruptcy, even though a new law that took effect last year made bankruptcy proceedings more onerous. Filing a Chapter 13 bankruptcy gives debtors up to 60 months to repay some or all of their debts. It stops the foreclosure process and gives debtors a way to make their payments.
"If they want to keep their home, bankruptcy is the way to go," said Richard Venable, a consumer bankruptcy lawyer in Bedford.
The last time home local foreclosures were so high was during the "Oil Patch" recession of the late 1980s and early 1990s.
The good news is that today's foreclosures make up a much smaller percentage of the overall housing market because the residential base in North Texas has more than doubled.
Areawide problem
Another difference: Back then, home defaults were often clustered in specific neighborhoods. These days, they're all over.
George Roddy, whose Foreclosure Listing Service Inc. has tracked North Texas foreclosures for more than 20 years, said, "I remember there were subdivisions in the late 1980s that had huge numbers of foreclosures.
"Today we are not seeing that, and it's so spread out that it doesn't focus on a subdivision or neighborhood," he said.
And while in the '80s most people owed more than what their houses were worth, the latest stats show that foreclosed homeowners have at least some equity.
In the last foreclosure boom, lenders dumped houses and it wasn't uncommon to see property values fall by 30 or 40 percent in a neighborhood, Mr. Roddy said.
Now, some real estate investors are looking at the Dallas-Fort Worth area as a place where bargains can be had for lender sales. So far, however, lenders are seeking top dollar for such homes, even if that means keeping them on the market longer, realtors say.
"We certainly haven't seen the value loss like we had in the 1980s," Mr. Roddy said. "But if the foreclosure numbers hold up like we've seen for February, it could be pretty scary."
BY THE NUMBERS
Data from current foreclosure postings in the Dallas-Fort Worth area
DALLAS COUNTY
Average original loan: $90,822
Average age of loan: five years
Average size of house: 1,616 square feet
Average age of house: 30 years
Average tax value of house: $113,475
DENTON COUNTY
Average original loan: $118,378
Average age of loan: three years
Average size of house 1,922 square feet
Average age of house: 13 years
Average tax value of house: $136,400
COLLIN COUNTY
Average original loan: $129,800
Average age of loan: three years
Average size of house: 1,938 square feet
Average age of house: 13 years
Average tax value of house: $146,282
TARRANT COUNTY
Average original loan: $93,448
Average age of loan: four years
Average size of house: 1,667 square feet
Average age of house: 25 years
Average tax value of house: $102,845
SOURCE: Foreclosure Listing Service
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