commuter guy
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A few points from the article:Anyone want to summarize? The globe won’t let me pay for the individual article, and I’m not creating a subscription to read this one story.
- New units cost 500 to 600k per unit to build, with high rises closer to Boston costing even more
- Even with zoning reform, costs to build remain high, there is a limit to rents that the market will bear to recapture costs, eventually people leave the area for cheaper housing (my own observation - this seems to be corroborated by significant out migration from the high cost northeast and west coast to the lower cost south)
- in recent years, construction costs have increased twice as fast as rents, straining the numbers which makes production of new housing financially work
- Massachusetts probably needs 25k new units per year, so far this year through the end of Oct. Mass has produced 10k, next year will be even lower
- land costs for multi family construction inside Rte 128 runs around 40k to 80k per unit
- larger projects use union labor; labor earns about $72 per hour (wage and benefits); about 1/3 higher than non union labor, Trade reps state they are more productive and reliable than non union workers
- hard costs, labor and building material amount to 75% to 80% of total cost of building
- developers take 2 to 3% to cover their expenses and staff
- complicated permitting process delays process and adds to costs due to financing carrying costs etc.
- green energy codes add 5% to 10% of cost, costs may be recouped over long term but create high up front costs
- affordable housing mandates add cost; Boston now requires 17% affordable plus an additional 3% set aside for section 8 rental vouchers, this was recently increased from 13%
- developers typically finance half of costs, equity partners invest the other half but expect returns. Pre covid investors wanted 4% return; now they are getting higher than those returns on safer investments like treasury bonds; investors now need 6 to 6.5% return to invest money in higher risk housing; this increases cost of production
- some ideas to lower costs that were mentioned in the article, lower or eliminate parking demands, streamline permitting/zoning, property tax breaks to spark investors to come back into the market. Modular construction can help lower costs in some instances; the article did not mention anything about adjusting green energy or affordable housing mandates to spark demand. I think some other cities have adjusted or are considering adjusting affordable housing mandates given that very little housing is being built for economic reasons;
- developers are worried, lots of projects/cranes currently ongoing, but when this current wave of housing wraps up, the next wave of housing production is going to cost quite a bit more than what's being constructed today.
More details in the full article: https://apps.bostonglobe.com/2023/1...tion-costs/?s_campaign=bdc:globewell:trending
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