Brave New World Optimism about housing, city proves unshakable by Barry Pearce
Jameson Realty
Group’s Charles Huzenis summed up the mood of
Chicago’s home buyers, builders and sellers as they entered the
new year, with one cheery and succinct sentence: “I think the whole show
is steady as she goes.” As the U.S.
economy entered the ninth year of an expansion poised to be the longest in
history, little could dampen the pervasive mood of optimism about the
economy, Chicago and local housing. Sure, interest
rates are edging up. So what? Sales of new
homes are down 7 percent? Big deal. Yes, the Daley
administration demonstrates a new way to bilk taxpayers each week, but
don’t those new fences look great? And have you seen the shrubs in the
middle of Ashland Avenue? He’s doing a fine job. We have entered
the Teflon age, where confidence reigns supreme and all news is good news.
Tell a Realtor that interest rates have been rising, that the Fed is
likely to bump them up further, and the response is, Good. Just what the
doctor ordered. Things are a little hot and if we need to boost rates,
apply the breaks gently to housing, so be it. Local brokers
and developers can afford affability. Last year was the best any of them
can remember and if 2000 is in the ballpark, actually, anywhere near the
ballpark, Southport, say, or even Ashland, they’ll keep smiling. What does the
year ahead hold for home buyers? The real answer is that nobody has a
clue. Keep that in mind as you read what the “experts” are saying,
experts like Federal Reserve Board Chairman Alan Greenspan, who warned
about the economy overheating a day before the Labor Department released
figures showing that inflation was near record lows during 1999 despite
low unemployment, high wages and skyrocketing stocks. Even the cynics
are beginning to think that past paradigms are poor predictors of what
will happen in this economy. And if housing cycles aren’t a thing of the
past in Chicago, then at least the previous ones are no longer good
indicators of what to expect. So what do the
experts think? With few
exceptions, they predict that 2000 will be another boom year for housing
in Chicago, though less robust than the record-setting pace of 1999. Last
year, sales of houses, condos and small apartment buildings in the
metropolitan area rose to 114,501 units, a 5.1 percent increase over the
108,939 recorded in 1998, according to the Chicago Association of
Realtors. Huzenis says that Jameson’s sales volume was up 25 percent
over the previous year, which was also a record-breaker. Coldwell
Banker’s David Hall says that sales were up 38 percent in his Lincoln
Park Plaza office during 1999, after an increase of 30 percent the
previous year. Normally, this
far into the proverbial cycle, the housing experts would be preparing for
a slowdown. What’s changed? For one thing,
demographics. The baby boomers are aging, and as they hit retirement age
they are providing a bubble of new home buyers with changing needs and
significant equity behind them. More important is the so-called “echo
boom,” the abundant children of the boomers who are just beginning to
enter the housing market. These twenty-somethings will be gobbling up
condos, lofts and houses in the city for years to come, some experts say. Simultaneously,
advances in technology are fundamentally changing the economy. Why is
inflation not a problem despite high consumer demand, an extremely tight
labor market and upward wage pressures? The Internet and new technologies
have increased efficiency and productivity so dramatically that inflation
can be kept under control without boosting interest rates, according to
some. Others think we
are due for a hike in rates, but developer Herb Emmerman, of Equity
Marketing Services, says that until mortgage rates start climbing over 10
percent, he won’t worry. “Our interest
rates are so low compared to previous years,” Emmerman says. “We had a
boom market when interest rates were 10 percent, and that was considered
low. What happens is you start selling more three- and five-year ARMs
(adjustable rate mortgages). People gravitate towards those products that
they can afford.” Emmerman says
his company sold close to 1,000 units during 1999, primarily at his large
conversions - 401 E. Ontario and the Grand Ohio - and the new highrise,
Museum Place. Recent upticks in interest rates have not noticeably slowed
traffic at city developments, according to sales managers, although they
say that trends are difficult to discern in the traditionally slow first
weeks of the year. Developers are
banking on traffic remaining strong as several massive projects gear up to
sell homes in and around downtown. The
redevelopment of the former Montgomery Ward headquarters at Chicago Avenue
and the Chicago River calls for at least 2,500 new housing units on the
23-acre site. Developers plan to revive the stalled Central Station
development in the South Loop with 800 condos and townhouses to be started
in the spring. Magellan Development Group has proposed a $1 billion
ten-year plan to redevelop the golf course at Illinois Center with a mix
of 6,000 homes as well as office buildings, parks and a school. Add to these
projects, MCL Development’s River East community and the potential for
massive housing development on near-Loop sites controlled by Walsh-Higgins
Construction and CSX Corp., and even the most optimistic observers may
question the amount of product on the drawing board. Emmerman,
though, is not worried. “The
conversion part of the market is merely replacing one type of housing with
another (rentals with condos), and during the ’78 to ’82 condo boom,
we sold 40,000 units in four years,” Emmerman says. We’ve only sold
8,000 units in the last couple years. The city of Chicago is a large place
and can accommodate a great amount of housing.” John Jaeger,
vice president of residential projects for Appraisal Research Counselors,
Ltd., cautiously agrees. “At this
point we still don’t see the potential for overbuilding, but if all
these projects happen, we definitely want to keep an eye on it,” Jaeger
says. “There are thousands of units in these projects, but overall
demand is strong right now.” Another factor
feeding the demand for urban housing, especially downtown, is a
dramatically improved cityscape. The central city appears safer, cleaner
and more vibrant than it has in decades. Formerly vacant industrial
buildings have become chic lofts and public improvements range from the
new museum campus to a planned theater district. More people want to live
in the heart of the city than ever before. The movement to
make Chicago a center for high-tech companies, “Silicon Prairie,” also
could bring a large infusion of cash and residents downtown. “We’re
assuming that a lot of the high-tech companies are going to come to
Chicago because have they have to access their workforce, and a lot of
young people in their 20s want to live in the city right now,” says
Huzenis, part of the team working to redevelop the behemoth of the old
Central Post Office, which straddles the Eisenhower Expressway, into
office space for high-tech users. “We think these workers are going to
want to be near work.” “The Chicago
Information and Technology Building, which the city is helping turn into
high-tech space for startup companies, could be huge,” Jaeger says.
“These startup companies could explode, and they want to be urban, not
in the suburbs. These are urban people who want the city nightlife and
lifestyle.” The residences
to accommodate such workers have been sprouting on every block, and
services and amenities are slowly catching up. In addition to the new
Dominick’s at Roosevelt and Canal, major grocery stores are opening in
Streeterville, on Halsted in the West Loop, on Wabash in the South Loop,
and on Superior in River North. Jaeger also sees the potential for “big
box” retailers such as Best Buy and Target downtown. CMC Heartland
Partners, developer of Kinzie Station, has reportedly sold a portion of
its West Loop site to one of these stores. Amidst the rosy
outlook for Chicago housing, there is some concern among analysts about
the high level of investor participation at many projects, buyers
purchasing units speculatively to later rent out or sell at a profit. The
lack of new rentals, especially in light of the exorbitant prices at new
developments, also may hurt the city in the long term. Jaeger, however,
says that several new rental projects will be announced during the coming
year. Chicago’s
housing market enters 2000 surrounded by the sort of euphoric outlook that
only comes along every millennium or so. “Chicago gets
great marks; people want to move downtown and live and work in Chicago,”
says David Hall, of Coldwell Banker. “If the school system can continue
to show high-profile improvements, and the city remains safe and stable
politically...There is a prevailing tone of optimism that is transporting
us into a new golden age.”
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