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Terrance Merck
  • Winston Salem, NC
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How do I find a profit in devlopment in current market. North Carolina

Terrance Merck
  • Winston Salem, NC
Posted Jun 26 2015, 18:42

i am looking to purchase 2.4 acres from develop 24-30 town home units. However the numbers don't seem to be in my favor.  The development would be phase two of a current 30 unit town home complex. The area is zoned and currently has sewer, water, and gas. The land is $160000. The 30 current units are all occupied with mostly home owners. Homes sold and selling between 100k-106k. It was plan to build and sell for similar price (quality and affordable housing). The construction cost at the low end($120 per sqft)alone seems to place the selling price at $144000. Not including land purchase, soft cost, etc. Is there any way to get numbers to match current area market? As stated in previous post I am a newbie. I am open and receptive to all information and constructive criticism. I'm hungry. When I eat everybody can get a plate.

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J Scott
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  • Investor
  • Sarasota, FL
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J Scott
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  • Investor
  • Sarasota, FL
ModeratorReplied Jun 26 2015, 23:20

Sounds like its not a deal even if you got the land for free... Time to move on... 

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Keith Bloemendaal
  • Contractor
  • Carolina Beach, NC
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Keith Bloemendaal
  • Contractor
  • Carolina Beach, NC
Replied Jun 27 2015, 05:09

$120 per ft seems extremely high for multi family in this area, a couple of years ago I built several fourplex buildings for around $60 per ft. Affordable housing isn't going to have granite, wood, tile, etc.. It is basic finishes. 

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Terrance Merck
  • Winston Salem, NC
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Terrance Merck
  • Winston Salem, NC
Replied Jun 28 2015, 14:25

@keithBloemendaal those numbers would definitely work in favor of what I want to accomplish. 

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J Scott
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J Scott
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  • Investor
  • Sarasota, FL
ModeratorReplied Jun 28 2015, 15:51
Originally posted by @Terrance Merck:

@keithBloemendaal those numbers would definitely work in favor of what I want to accomplish. 

First, unless you have a good bit of experience and have done this before, I doubt you'd hit $60/sf if you had to put in utilities, separate meters, sidewalks and other common things you'll find with multi-family development. 

That said, even if you do hit $60/sf, I don't see how the numbers work if the units are larger than 1200 sf (given you ARV projections).

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Keith Bloemendaal
  • Contractor
  • Carolina Beach, NC
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Keith Bloemendaal
  • Contractor
  • Carolina Beach, NC
Replied Jun 28 2015, 16:36
Originally posted by @J Scott:
Originally posted by @Terrance Merck:

@keithBloemendaal those numbers would definitely work in favor of what I want to accomplish. 

First, unless you have a good bit of experience and have done this before, I doubt you'd hit $60/sf if you had to put in utilities, separate meters, sidewalks and other common things you'll find with multi-family development. 

That said, even if you do hit $60/sf, I don't see how the numbers work if the units are larger than 1200 sf (given you ARV projections).

 My numbers were for building costs and not development, so yes, you are correct....

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Terrance Merck
  • Winston Salem, NC
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Terrance Merck
  • Winston Salem, NC
Replied Jun 28 2015, 16:53

@JScott thanks for your assessment. I am a novice and though 60 per sqft is attainable I am sure my lack of experience coupled with hidden expenses and things that you've mentioned plus more that I am faced with challenges. You've suggested that I not waste my time with project and move on to something else, this option may be valid as I am open, however I believe that if approached properly this could be a profitable project. I will continue to hash out details and numbers and seek advice before making decsion to move forward. Thank you

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Jared S.
  • Professional
  • Central FL, FL
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Jared S.
  • Professional
  • Central FL, FL
Replied Jun 28 2015, 17:12

you guys can build a house for as low as $60 per ft?

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Keith Bloemendaal
  • Contractor
  • Carolina Beach, NC
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Keith Bloemendaal
  • Contractor
  • Carolina Beach, NC
Replied Jun 28 2015, 17:16
Originally posted by @Jared S.:

you guys can build a house for as low as $60 per ft?

 I have, but I am quoting hard construction numbers only. No land. No loan costs. No soft costs. There isn't any money in it though unless you are building 60+ units a year. Most of what I build now runs in the $100 per ft range....

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Terrance Merck
  • Winston Salem, NC
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Terrance Merck
  • Winston Salem, NC
Replied Jun 28 2015, 17:22

I'm finding that anything above $80 per sqft is not worth the chase for this type of project in this area. ( $80 per sqft includes all other cost) The First phase of current town homes developed are selling and sold between 98k-110k. Does anyone no how to cut cost, maintain quality and make a profit or am I dreaming? 

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Terrance Merck
  • Winston Salem, NC
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Terrance Merck
  • Winston Salem, NC
Replied Jun 28 2015, 17:25

@keithBloemendaal thanks for the clarity. 

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Jared S.
  • Professional
  • Central FL, FL
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Jared S.
  • Professional
  • Central FL, FL
Replied Jun 28 2015, 17:46

Keith B,

No money in building at $60 per sq ft.  If you're selling the homes for $120 per sq ft, how is there no money in it (is it that land, finance costs, impact fees, etc) are eating all the profit?

I'm not expert but I do wor in th ebuilding industry, and where I live, if i could build a home at $60 per sq ft, i could do well, even part-time building a few per yr.

Ex:  lot 50k, impact fees 10k, financing fees and all the soft costs say another 10k... so thats 70k.  build a 2000 sq ft house at 60/sq ft so that's another 120k.  So all in at about 180k.  that home can sell for 280k where i live.  that's 100k gross profit. 

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Keith Bloemendaal
  • Contractor
  • Carolina Beach, NC
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Keith Bloemendaal
  • Contractor
  • Carolina Beach, NC
Replied Jun 28 2015, 18:03
Originally posted by @Jared S.:

Keith B,

No money in building at $60 per sq ft.  If you're selling the homes for $120 per sq ft, how is there no money in it (is it that land, finance costs, impact fees, etc) are eating all the profit?

I'm not expert but I do wor in th ebuilding industry, and where I live, if i could build a home at $60 per sq ft, i could do well, even part-time building a few per yr.

Ex:  lot 50k, impact fees 10k, financing fees and all the soft costs say another 10k... so thats 70k.  build a 2000 sq ft house at 60/sq ft so that's another 120k.  So all in at about 180k.  that home can sell for 280k where i live.  that's 100k gross profit. 

 The townhomes I built for $60/ft were selling for less than $100/ft, they were selling at $91/ft. Market driven of course. Again, these were multi family, not single family. We also developed the land, but it was purchased in the higher end of the market, then we were building these in a lower end. They were also 1200' homes, not 2k sq ft homes. Also, when you build at $60-$70/ft you are putting the lowest grade finishes in, so in no way could you sell for $280k for a 2k ft home, at least not here. 

Most important here, I believe, is your market. Everyone will have different costs, sales prices, etc. 

BTW, I am from central Florida, what part are you in?

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Jared S.
  • Professional
  • Central FL, FL
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Jared S.
  • Professional
  • Central FL, FL
Replied Jun 28 2015, 18:21

Oh I gotcha.  Yea, in Central FL, in certain areas, you can sell a lower end (no granite, no stainles steel, or other higher end finishes, etc) for the high 200k's.  where i am, in a nice area and on a decent lot, you can build a more basic home, 2000 sq ft home, and get high 200k's for it.  Even older homes built in the 70s can fetch over 200k where i am... and that may be 1600 sq ft.

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Terrance Merck
  • Winston Salem, NC
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Terrance Merck
  • Winston Salem, NC
Replied Jun 28 2015, 18:24

@ keithb is this scenario possible or even close in winston salem area in todays market. Taking into account soft cost, land acquisition, etc.

 (The townhomes I built for $60/ft were selling for less than $100/ft, they were selling at $91/ft.) 

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Chris Martin
  • Investor
  • Willow Spring, NC
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Chris Martin
  • Investor
  • Willow Spring, NC
Replied Jun 28 2015, 18:33

The assumptions: improved lots, taps paid, site plans already accepted, plots already defined, county fees already paid. Are any lots already pre-sold? Are you getting deeds to the 24-30 (what is it?) lots? What contracts are in place?

Sorry, I'm skeptical. Sounds like a builder ready to exit a development that isn't profitable. Unless you have a contractor's license (and experience doing this kind of development)  or have a contractor to do the development on board, this is an opportunity not worth pursuing.

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Terrance Merck
  • Winston Salem, NC
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Terrance Merck
  • Winston Salem, NC
Replied Jun 29 2015, 08:38

Thanks @chris Martin

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Manolo D.#3 Contractors Contributor
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  • Los Angeles, CA
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Manolo D.#3 Contractors Contributor
  • Contractor
  • Los Angeles, CA
Replied Jun 30 2015, 21:37
Originally posted by @Terrance Merck:

@ keithb is this scenario possible or even close in winston salem area in todays market. Taking into account soft cost, land acquisition, etc.

 (The townhomes I built for $60/ft were selling for less than $100/ft, they were selling at $91/ft.) 

That price point, you need to get workers or subs that you could hire 180 days a year, if not, they will charge you more because you have less job. Like for me, I do not hire subs 80% of the time, I have an in-house crew to do everything, but we keep them working for 2-3 months then go on break for 2 weeks, that is my cycle. The more volume work you bring, the cheaper they are. Seems to me like you could not get that much volume. Everybody is saying you stay away from the deal, I suggest you take their advice. Those margins for me isn't even worth running the numbers. According to my mock numbers, I have a parameter set right now at 40% of market price = land + hard construction cost.