![]() |
|
|
Despite the record amount of inventory the Alabama Gulf Coast has added. Rental income for investors has been record setting. We are seeing the rental market as strong as ever, with the added demand from vacationers opting to drive into our area. The groups of people who used to travel long distances are choosing to stay close to home. The gulf coast beaches offer wonderful white sand, restaurants, shopping, and fishing. Most of our guests drive in from 5 hours or less to spend a week here, although we have had people from as far away as New Jersey fly in to stay at the Turquoise Place. The big beach houses and luxury condos are already filling up for 2010 so book your vacation right away at www.gotothegulfcoast.com
We are also taking a select number of new properties on our program for next year if you need a good property manager contact me at gotothegulfcoast@yahoo.com
![]() |
|
Condo prices at Gulf may be leveling off
Auctions, distress sales, buyers with cash chipping away at bloated inventory at Gulf, agents say Sunday, August 02, 2009 By KATHY JUMPER Real Estate Editor
Condominium prices may be leveling off as auctions, distress sales and buyers with cash are reducing some of the inventory at the Gulf, according to agents.
The recent auction sale of 31 units at Escapes! To The Shores in Orange Beach, which netted more than $12 million, "makes a statement of what our rock-bottom prices are right now," said Tina Maynard of RealtySouth in Orange Beach.
The two- and three-bedroom units sold for under $200 per square foot, which included the 10-percent buyer's premium. That's less than half what comparable properties brought in the hot market just before 2004's Hurricane Ivan.
Some three-bedrooms at Escapes! sold at $168 per square foot. The units sold for $290,000 to $600,000, not including the buyer's premium, at an auction held by The National Auction Group.
The steep monthly maintenance fees at Escapes! - from $1,000 to $1,500 - prevented some people from buying, Maynard said. She and other agents predicted the fees will go down once a homeowners association is formed.
Today's buyers are typically end-users who do not plan to sell for four or five years, and most are looking for a deal, whether it's a foreclosure property or a motivated seller, agents said.
While there are some sales in the $700,000 and up range, most buyers are looking to spend $400,000 or less.
"They are buying with a lot of cash," said Patrick Daily, owner of REMAX of Orange Beach. Daily said he was surprised the Escapes! developers stopped the auction after 31 units sold when there were so many people in the crowd with cash.
"I think the developers took a beating," Daily said. "They wanted $200 per square foot and didn't get it." Still, he said, the buyers got nice, large units with wonderful amenities.
The auction buyers were typical of today's purchasers - educated, even comparing insurance costs at other buildings prior to the auction, he said.
"Everybody is looking for the best quality construction at the best price," Daily said.
"Cash is king, especially with the financial situation going on," said Robbie Jaeger of Meyer Real Estate in Gulf Shores. Most lenders require at least 25 percent down, he said. "The deals are definitely out there."
"We have to get the inventory off the shelf and as the supply is reduced, it will drive prices back up," said Steve Jones of Kaiser Realty in Gulf Shores. But the prices won't be back to the "unreal" high prices of 2005 and 2006, he said.
More families are coming back into the buying market - these are buyers who couldn't afford a unit when the market was hot and prices were high, according to Maynard. "There are still enough people who made wise decisions and can afford to buy."
/cut/3/cBILL STARLING/ Staff PhotographerCondominiums line the beach at Gulf Shores in June. As inventory is reduced, condo prices appear to be leveling off, local Realtors say.
![]() |
|
Orange Beach approves design for Gulf-front resort hotel
Thursday, July 23, 2009 By RYAN DEZEMBER Staff Reporter
ORANGE BEACH - Developer K.C. Chiang's designs for a high-rise Gulf-front hotel and convention center won unanimous approval from the Orange Beach City Council, but now the panel must decide if it wants to grant the developer a tax abatement worth tens of millions of dollars to see the project come to fruition.
During a two-hour public hearing Tuesday night that preceded the council's vote on the designs, Chiang said that he and his partners - Chicago-based Centrum Properties and the Wyndham Hotel chain - need Orange Beach to share millions of dollars of revenue generated at the resort to secure their $160 million financing package.
Specifically, they are asking for half the sales and lodgings taxes for up to 30 years as well as the ability to levy additional taxes of up to 4 percent on the resort's rooms and at its restaurants and shops.
Chiang said he and Centrum have a pledge from Bank of America to loan them $110 million, but that arrangement is contingent on the developers raising $50 million in tax-free bonds. Those 30-year bonds, which would be issued through a special tax district set up on the property by the city, would be financed, in large part, by the resort's additional levies and the rebate tax.
The developers' lenders, Chiang said, "want to see more involvement from the city.
"This is something that is a new financial strategy that the financial world is requiring of us today. It's a different method of financing and I really don't have a lot of choice out there in order to make this happen."
Elected officials generally said Tuesday that they were willing to forgo for three decades half of the sales and lodgings tax generated there - estimated by the developer to be more than $30 million - in order to help Chiang realize his vision for the Wyndham & Winfield Resort Hotel and Convention Center.
"Unfortunately, the rules of the game have changed," said Mayor Tony Kennon. "In my research I believe this project can't get approved without abatements. It's just that simple."
Said Councilman Jeff Silvers: "None of us want to give away tax breaks, but what I want to do for our community is capture 50 percent of something instead of zero percent of nothing."
Plans for the Wyndham & Winfield call for nearly 500 hotel rooms housed in towers of 17 and 18 stories, convention seating for 1,200 and a theater that could double as a wedding chapel. There will also be a 20-lane computerized bowling alley to which Chiang said he will try to woo professional tournaments, a pair of restaurants, recreational features ranging from a roof-top tennis courts to a video game arcade and a 6,000-square-foot spa.
Should the council approve the revenue-sharing deal in the coming weeks, Chiang said he would start construction on the 9-acre tract in February. When construction starts Chiang will have to pay somewhere between $4.5 million and $5.5 million on sewer taps, building permits, impact fees and sales taxes on construction materials. The two-year project will create 800 construction jobs, and the resort will employ 300 once it opens, Chiang said.
Chiang, a Mobile businessman, said that all told the project could net Orange Beach more than $88 million in revenue over 30 years even after half of the sales and lodgings tax were refunded to finance the bonds. Chiang also told city officials that he would have financial incentive to repay the bonds, which will carry an interest rate nearly double the 4.76 rate on his $110 million loan, before they mature.
As such, he said he may only need the tax abatement for half the 30 years. City leaders, however, said they will base their decision on sharing revenue for the full 30 years.
![]() |
|
Splashy Orange Beach resort hotel plans unveiled
Friday, July 10, 2009
By RYAN DEZEMBER
Staff Reporter
ORANGE BEACH - K.C. Chiang, a Mobile businessman, this week unveiled detailed plans for a four-star, Gulf-front hotel and convention center that would boast nearly 500 hotel rooms, a 20-lane bowling alley, convention seating for 1,200 and a theater that can double as a wedding chapel.
"The type of clientele we're bringing in are new blood, new revenue, a new kind of (visitor) we have not had," Chiang told the Orange Beach City Council on Tuesday.
On July 21, Chiang and his partners, Chicago-based Centrum Properties and the Wyndham Hotel chain, are scheduled to meet again with city officials to talk about the economic development incentives they believe will be needed to help finance construction.
City Administrator Ken Grimes said Thursday that in preliminary talks with municipal officials, Chiang and his team have said they want to create a special tax district on their 9.3 acres to allow them to collect special levies from customers and for Orange Beach to agree to share some of the sales and lodgings tax the resort generates.
Orange Beach agreed in 2004 to rebate to developers of The Wharf up to $25 million of the taxes generated at that mixed-use project.
City officials are willing to consider the developers' request, Grimes said, in an effort to help the project win financing from hesitant lenders.
"(Banks) are not getting behind projects like they once did," Grimes said. "They're looking for more public-private partnerships."
Proposed for what was once a cluster of 20 beach houses near the city's western edge, the Wyndham & Winfield Resort Hotel and Convention Center is the latest big vision for the property. In 2005, developers won approval to build a 30-story, 387-unit condo tower called Coral Reef.
That tower never came out of the ground and, like several unrealized condo projects along Baldwin County's beaches, has been redrawn as a hotel.
While high-rise hotels require the same type of multimillion-dollar construction loans to build as condo towers, their success is contingent not on luring hundreds of buyers but on finding companies to manage the hotels.
Chiang's project features two towers, one carrying the Wyndham Hotel flag and the other with his own Winfield Resorts brand.
Drawn up by architect Forrest Daniell, who has designed several high-profile projects in Orange Beach and Perdido Key, Fla. - including the Turquoise Place condominiums - the glassy towers share a curvy, three-story base.
Above two levels of parking are most of the resort's amenities and meeting space.
A pair of ballrooms will be able to be joined to create a single, 12,000-square-foot space big enough to hold more than a thousand people.
Beyond adjacent meeting rooms will be a theater to host dinners, performances or weddings. Two restaurants are planned - one fine dining; the other featuring a more casual atmosphere garnished with orchid gardens - as are a pair of retail outlets: a hotel gift shop and a bridal store.
Pools are proposed both indoors and out, and the designs call for rooftop courts for basketball and tennis. The Wyndham Hotel, rising a level above the 17-story Winfield tower, will be topped with a 6,000-square-foot spa.
But the grandest of all the recreational features is the computerized 20-lane bowling alley Chiang said he hopes he can use to lure professional tournaments to town.
The bowling alley, Chiang said, is a "driving force" behind the project, as much as the conference space. The lanes, he said, "will bring in a totally different breed of folks that are money spenders."
![]() |
|
|
It is a hot summer day in Orange Beach and Gulf Shores. I love living here. Recently, I was in New York City. It was cold and rainy. I like it here more even with all the issues of living along the coast. There is something very special and beautiful about this area. I sit on my dock and watch the birds and the river grass. I live on a very nice isolated bayou. I think one of our problems selling real estate here is always selling the investment. The most important issue is the beauty of our area. Investments come and go however this is one of the most beautiful spots in the world.
ActiveRain Corp. is not responsible for the accuracy of the site's content (which is written by members of the ActiveRain Real Estate Network) and does not endorse the views of the real estate agents, mortgage brokers, and others listed here.
Powered by the ActiveRain Real Estate Network
© 2009 ActiveRain Corp. All Rights Reserved