Here's an article that underscores our bullish outlook on Intown Atlanta:
http://www.bizjournals.com/atlanta/stories/2008/08/11/daily81.html?surround=lfn
Here's an article that underscores our bullish outlook on Intown Atlanta:
http://www.bizjournals.com/atlanta/stories/2008/08/11/daily81.html?surround=lfn
Hi there, and welcome to our first blog post! I want to start off on an issue that has been on the forefront of my mind for a while now. Seems like you can't turn on the news or read a paper these days without reading a headline implying that the sky is falling in regards to residential real estate. One must always remember the expression, "All real estate is local." There is a huge difference between the "bubble" markets of Florida, California, Las Vegas, etc., and Atlanta ... especially Intown Atlanta!
Atlanta is different
First of all, Atlanta is not a "bubble" market. We did not have the "irrational exuberance" indicated by a huge run-up in prices over a short period of time. Since we didn't have a bubble, there's no bubble to burst! Sure, sales have slowed down, but we are not seeing the decline in values that the bubble markets are seeing.
Intown Atlanta is even more different!
The suburban Atlanta real estate market is struggling a bit. It's all about supply and demand. Let's say you have a home to sell in your suburban neighborhood. Next door, a developer starts a new subdivision of 250 homes. There's 250 more homes on the market, adding to the supply and competing with you to sell your home. Even if demand stayed constant, the increase of supply would drive prices down.
By contrast to the suburbs, there are virtually no plots of land in Midtown or Buckhead large enough to develop large new single-family subdivisions. Like waterfront property, “they’re not making any more land” in Midtown or Buckhead. Therefore, unlike the suburbs, a single family homeowner in Intown Atlanta is not “competing” with new construction in the marketplace. The only single-family new construction in Midtown and Buckhead is “infill construction”, where an older house is torn down to build a new one. This scarcity of newly constructed homes in the area means that newer and renovated homes yield a premium in the marketplace.
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