A
Lincoln Park milestone: Lincoln
Park, for decades one of Chicagos richest neighborhoods, reached
a milestone in 2001. For the first time, the average list price of
a single-family home there topped $1 million. To be
exact, $1,126,742. The 2001
average was 14.4 percent higher than in 2000, according to the Lakefront
Market Survey, a quarterly analysis by local real estate brokerage
Sudler & Co. The average transaction price, the number buyers
and sellers actually settle on, was a little lower, at $916,686, but
still a new record. Stock
market investors must be kicking themselves now. In each of the last
four years, the average price for a single-family home in Lincoln
Park has risen by at least $100,000. The
luxury market in Lincoln Park and the Gold Coast is popping,
quipped James Kinney, president of Rubloff Residential Properties,
which posted a record $700 million in sales in 2001. Despite
all the talk of recession, the luxury market appears to be in great
shape. Some properties are selling for over asking price. We are busy.
I couldnt be happier. Developer
Bruce Fogelson, president of Paramount Homes, said Lincoln Parks
luxury home hunters are getting smarter and smarter. They
feel they are entitled to the best quality and high-end features and
as a result, the price point is increasing, said Fogelson, who
is developing 16 single-family homes in the million-dollar range at
Wrightwood Park, 2621-2657 N. Paulina, in Lincoln Park. The Lakefront
Market Survey looks at all transactions reported by the Multiple Listing
Service of Northern Illinois (MLSNI) involving single-family homes,
condominiums and cooperatives in five Chicago neighborhoods: the Loop,
the Near North Side, Lincoln Park, Lakeview and Uptown. However,
the MLSNI data does not include sales at many new residential developments
and is a more accurate gauge of the resale market. Even
though prices are soaring for luxury homes, the market for single-family
houses in the lakefront neighborhoods slowed noticeably. Only 415
detached homes were sold during the year, 9.4 percent fewer than the
2000 total of 458. But even
with a drop in the number of sales, dollar volume rose to $380 million,
an increase of 1.9 percent over 2000. The average transaction price
for a single-family home rose a robust 12.5 percent, to $916,686 from
$815,188 a year earlier along the lakefront. Since
1998, when the average single-family home sold for $616,000, the average
price is up 48.8 percent, said Jeanine McShea, executive vice
president for Sudler. The condominium
and cooperative category outperformed the single-family market over
the course of 2001 in several ways. The number of units sold increased
4.5 percent, to 6,778 in 2001, up from 6,488 in 2000. Sales volume
also rose, topping out at $2.25 billion, a gain of 9.6 percent over
the $2.05 billion recorded in 2000. The average
price of lakefront condos and co-ops climbed 4.9 percent, to $332,842
from $317,366 in the prior year. The time
needed to sell a home increased for all residential properties last
year. Average market time for single-family residences along the lakefront
was 61 days, up 22 percent from the 51-day average recorded in 2000.
In the
lakefront condo / co-op market, average market time climbed seven
days, or 18 percent, from 39 days in 2000 to 46 days last year. Among
individual neighborhoods, Uptown was noteworthy in the Sudler study.
The number of condo and co-op
transactions there was up 28.3 percent, and the average transaction
price rose 28.2 percent, to $215,873 from $179,403 in 2000. Historically,
the average condo price in Uptown has equaled around 57 percent of
the average price for all Lakefront Market condo transactions. In
2001, Uptown condos and co-ops closed that gap, averaging 65 percent
of the Lakefront Market figure. These
statistics suggest that buyers are attracted to Uptown as a result
of its lower prices, but that the price advantage is slowly diminishing,
said McShea. |