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City Kicks Off Great Places 2020 Initiative

Close to 500 people were in attendance last week to kick off the Great Places 2020 Initiative, ac private/public partnership that has already committed $84 millions.  Those dollars will be concentrated in a very tight geographical zone to serve as a wellspring for an entire neighborhood.  Think Fountain Square, think Mass Ave.

Get a bunch of companies, non-profits and the City to pump tons of money into a street corner, then watch the private sector move in and set up shop to create a “really vibrant, walkable, thriving” place, as Tedd Grain, Deputy Director of LISC Indianapolis remarked.

The initial three targets are:

  • Englewood Village, centered at East Washington Street and Oxford.  The vacant 125,000 square Mallory Building is available and could serve as a cornerstone.
  • River West.  Yes, just west of the White River at Michigan and King Avenue.  Close to IUPUI and the growing medical district.  With 30% of the area’s houses abandoned, there’s plenty of opportunity.
  • Maple Crossing, at 38th and Illinois.  Again, lots of opportunity (if you want to call it that).  Close by are the Children’s Museum, Butler, IMA, and the Fairgrounds.  The City has already committed to investing $5 millions into Tarkington Park.  It will then serve as the anchor around which the newly revitalized neighborhood will spring.

Will all of this happen overnight?  Certainly not.  Will it surely work?  Hmmm  Although if they pour enough money into it private money will follow and there will likely be some improvement-even if these areas don’t become the next Mass Ave.  Is there money to be made here for home buyers and investors?  Most likely.  Although it will pay to do your homework and buy smart.K

As with anything else real estate related, if you want the latest, most up to date info (and some ideas on how to put that to good use for your own self) just call me!

 “I work harder to make good things happen!”  -Bob

 

Indy Named TOP Market for First Time Home Buyers

Zillow, the mega online real estate data website, has named Indianapolis as the top dog, numero uno, #1 market in the country for first time buyers.  Zillow used a number of factors in coming up with their top 10 list.  Those metro areas making the cut had:

  • Mortgage payments lower than rents.  (What’s not to like?!)
  • Low prices.  (Again, what’s not to like?!)
  • Low ratio of average price to average earnings.

Indianapolis homes sold for a median average of $148,263 this past month.  With the average household income running right at $52,000 per year, that means the average household can buy the middle of the road house for 2.8x their annual income.  That’s sweet!

And it is many times better than folks residing in San Francisco where the average household makes $83,222.  Now, that sounds good, but… how they manage to make the monthly payment on the average home, I have no idea.  Get this, the average price recently crested $1,000,000.  So, the average household has to pay 12x earnings forK the average house.   Ouch!!  Do the math- that just doesn’t work for most (define that 97%) people.

Ok, ‘nuff said.  If you’d like to learn how to take advantage of those low prices and low payments that Indy has to offer, it’s EZ… call me.

“I work harder to make good things happen!”  -Bob

 

What— Millennials moving to the suburbs?

Yep, that just might be the story.  Seems “After more than a decade of growing concentration, we see that the millennial trend of increased downtown living has peaked out and is now beginning to decline.” That’s according to Dowell Myers, Professor of Urban Planning and Demography at Price School of Public Policy.

So, where are they going instead?  Well, that would be the suburbs.  They’re not yet getting married and buying houses (at least not on par with earlier generations), but with the increased supply of rental homes available in the suburbs, more and more Millennials are moving to the burbs and renting single family homes.  Why are there so many single family homes available for rent?  That’s easy enough to see.  Following the financial crisis, where big banks took millions of homes through foreclosure and then sold them off to mega-investors (courtesy of ultra cheap money from the Fed).

K  However, prices have been increasing in most markets.  And some markets on the east and west coasts are back in bubble land.  So, it’s no surprise that the highest percentage of home loans for Millennials are taken in the Midwest, where prices are the most sane (by far).

Want to learn how to buy right in today’s market?  EZ… call me.

“I work harder to make good things happen!”  -Bob