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I drove around downtown Saturday morning late love to see the activity with construction along with the people. Is it just me or does the Derby going at a snail pace?
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Condos
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There's a construction defect lawsuit on almost everything lately. The drama at Landmark and Contour are two I'm aware of that would probably make anyone think twice, but this is the USA. Anyone can sue anyone for any reason no matter how ridiculous it may seem - recent news will support that.
There's a risk of lawsuits when you develop apartments, as well. |
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I get the construction defect issue. We had our own here as well. However condos are still going up all over the country so to me it doesn't fully explain the lack of high-rise condos here.
I thought initially One Camelback would be condos, but not it looks like it's apartments. Very weird. That seemed like the perfect case for luxury condos. There are no balconies however, so I wonder if that is a deal-breaker for condo buyers? I could understand that if it's the case. I'm not sure I'd love to buy a place and have zero outdoor space or be able to step outside to enjoy the view. |
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I really don't know why Condo's have not been built downtown but im sure if developers thought they could make money on condos they would be building them. |
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Thanks. |
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I think overall we have a lock of experienced condo developers in town, so we'd need to see developers coming in from other cities. I still would LOVE to see an Optima signature project downtown. I love how they do those projects where it somehow delivers privacy still while being more of a tower-esk design with all the vegetation, balcony variations, etc. My dream would be to see a 30-story version downtown. |
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The hardest part about development, and it's what keeps little guys like me from playing, is having to front the money with no guarantee you'll get it back. I even have trouble stomaching the money being temporarily gone when doing a flip, can't imagine how a first-time apartment or condo developer might feel waiting to sell 80% of their inventory to see the thing pencil out or waiting to get the cap to 6% to make the sale. |
Condo's all over the country?
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Basically what I'm saying is there are lots of high-rise building going up around the country where you can purchase to own. Here it seems like all high-rise development are rentals. |
Lucky 44 Monroe decided to convert to rentals back in 2011, since the builder is now caught up in a 3+ year lawsuit regarding defective balcony railings. Still no access since they were locked up in September 2017, and I'm sure the litigation will drag on for several more years.
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You're joking... That's still going on? Lived in 44 for 5 years and moved out a few months after the balcony situation started... 3 years ago-ish? I can't believe that hasn't been sorted out yet. HSL is a pile of garbage! |
It's still going on but the 10% discount and the fact that the units are so massive compared to most of the available apartment stock downtown makes it very much worth it. Any price you see online is before the 10% discount.
Not to mention you're only 4 screws away from having balcony access at your "own risk"... |
Also most of the residents have found ways to get out non the balcony's anyway
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Honest question: because Arizona doesn't strike me as a particularly tort-friendly state, does the fact that HOAs are so powerful tip the balance away from developers? I would think that with so much development, folks building subdivisions would get hella sued as well if it was totally easy to sue for crappy construction. |
Not necessarily.
Developers typically turn the community over to the HOA board after all the sales are completed. Almost every HOA board that finds itself spending money on repairs will have an attorney (or twelve) calling them to drum up a case. It happened at Landmark on Central and few attorney homeowners decided to take it to court and they won a substantial judgment. The GC who did the work when they converted from apartments to condos went insolvent and it became a fight with insurance. First it was the plumbing that had to be replaced, now it's the balconies, next it's going to be the HVAC system one stack at a time. They're getting rocked. If you think Arizona isn't a tort-friendly state talk to those guys, they've figured how to to rock the court's wheels off. Where I'm going with this is the original developer got dragged into this and is also being held responsible. |
I was under the impression that with Landmark the developer bought a moribund apartment building, slapped a coat of paint on it, and sold it off as renovated condos with problems occurring almost immediately after.
I can think of better examples in tort fingerpointing than the scam those poor buyers suffered. The developer must have certainly known that it was hardly worth the concrete it was made of when they converted it. |
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