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Love seeing what's going on in Phoenix. I'm planning on moving there in a few months to escape the high cost of housing in CA. Looks like there are some new infill projects in the works. Any tips for a new fellow resident?
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ick, that sounds horrible. Is Phoenix really that bad?
I guess we have some riots coming up pretty soon. |
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and exhibit A: Glendale or 1960's LA? http://40.media.tumblr.com/4445668bf...natdo1_500.jpg |
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Now it is expensive and overcrowded. It isn't a bad thing but people come to Phoenix thinking "oh its the 5th biggest city in the country" In real terms we are a metro of 4.5 million 1/5th Los Angeles' size and like 13th place in Metro areas. that's why its a bit annoying when people say things like "why does Phoenix have a small skyline its so big" its not really though! |
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Pre-good luck! |
Most of the new infill that's coming in has SoCal prices, but without California wages which are *much* higher than Arizona's.
I'm skeptical this will all get built and fill up. Jefferson at Legacy in Scottsdale has a 6 weeks free rent promo and it just recently opened. A complex in demand wouldn't have to do that. |
Thanks for the info! I've lived and SD and LA and think 3-4M is about the right size for a city. I like older, more urban or retro neighborhoods but my wife and I have a newborn, so we're contemplating getting a house as opposed to a condo or townhouse. Don't love the idea of living in suburbia, but it probably best fits our needs for now. Apologize if I hijacked the thread, but it is great to hear what people have to say about the city...good and bad.
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There are pockets that can be shitty so make sure you have a good realtor. But a lot of the suburbs are nice if you can handle suburbia :yes: Chandler and Gilbert both have nice little main-streets to give you some faux density, but enough to be satisfying and a lot of the new neighborhoods out there are clean safe and downright gorgeous. |
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As for most of our infill having southern California prices, I have to ask if you've done any price shopping in SD, LA, or the like. Prices in Phoenix, even the high ones, aren't nearly as high as equivalent properties in Southern California cities if we compare like products. Average "all bedroom" rents in the downtown area right now are roughly $1,000 a month, this is a complied average of 1,2, and 3 bedroom units. I am not 100% familiar with the Los Angeles apartment market at this current time and while it's actually cheaper now than the last time I did comparo pricing, it's still quite pricey. I searched apartments under $1,000/mo and everything in an even remotely desirable neighborhood was a studio and in the high $900's. Lots of the inventory I am seeing is centered around MacArthur Park which if you're familiar is not exactly the swankiest part of the city. If you want a 2br you're going to pay $2,500 or so for the same product that costs $1,500 here. What's going to happen here is in two to three years you'll have a ton of new apartment inventory available. There will be an absolute over-saturation in the market and buildings will have to start competing with each other in ways we have never seen here since the 1970s, you'll see free vacations, free rent, and all sorts of other perks being offered. The density of the central city is about to change dramatically from what we are used to, gone are the days of having a restaurant to yourself and having zero issues finding parking spaces but understand that there's going to be a giant bubble pop in about five years when there simply aren't enough people moving into the city to fill these units at the rate they are expected to pull in. |
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Sorry for the rant, but that's the kind of thing that gets real estate licenses revoked. |
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Ive never been one for following the rules |
It's your responsibility to pick where you live, don't try to pin it on an agent who isn't allowed to make that decision for you!
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Is upper Midtown that good of a neighborhood and are there that many people wanting to live in a studio there for $900+? |
But you're comparing one high-end build out to a whole city's low end studio pricing it's not apples to apples, a similar studio to Elevation in DTLA is going to cost $1,500 or more. The $1,000 studios I referenced earlier are not A class properties, maybe low B at best. At any rate the market will adjust and you'll see those prices come down substantially in the next year to 18 months.
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As someone that has lived in SD and Orange County, I can attest to the fact that housing is much, much less expensive in PHX (home purchases anyhow) than in California. My wife and I are thrilled with the idea that we can buy a brand new house for less than we'd pay for a beat up condo here in CA. As someone who loves the desert, Phoenix seems like a great place to be.
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There doesn't seem to be anyone with generic indifference like say, Cincinnati or Tampa. Just love or pure hate. |
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