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How Real Estate Developers Think - Peter Hendee Brown


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      How Real Estate Developers Think

      THE CITY IN THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY

      Eugenie L. Birch and Susan M. Wachter, Series Editors

      How Real Estate Developers Think

      Design, Profits, and Community

      Peter Hendee Brown

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      UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS

      PHILADELPHIA

      Copyright © 2015 University of Pennsylvania Press

      All rights reserved. Except for brief quotations used for purposes of review or scholarly citation, none of this book may be reproduced in any form by any means without written permission from the publisher.

      Published by

      University of Pennsylvania Press

      Philadelphia, Pennsylvania 19104-4112

       www.upenn.edu/pennpress

      Printed in the United States of America

      on acid-free paper

      10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

       Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

      Brown, Peter Hendee, author.

      How real estate developers think : design, profits, and community / Peter Hendee Brown.

      pages cm — (The city in the twenty-first century)

      ISBN 978-0-8122-4705-3

      1. Real estate development—United States. 2. City planning—United States. I. Title. II. Series: City in the twenty-first century book series.

      HD255.B758 2015

      333.73′150973—dc23

      2014040780

       For Annaand for our children,Magnus and Astrid

       Contents

       Prologue: A Brick Wall in Evanston

       Chapter 1. Developer as Visionary

       Chapter 2. Deal Makers

       Chapter 3. The Real Estate Development Process

       Chapter 4. Developers and Their Architects

       Chapter 5. Good Design

       Chapter 6. Selling Real Estate

       Chapter 7. Market Cycles, Leverage, and Timing

       Chapter 8. Profits, Values, and a Sense of Purpose

       Chapter 9. The Creation of Place and Culture

       Chapter 10. Developers and the Community

       Notes

       Index

       Acknowledgments

       Prologue

      A Brick Wall in Evanston

      We used to call them our town founders and we honored them by erecting their statues in our town squares. Today we just call them “developers.”

      —Andrés Duany, Miami architect and planner1

       The Costs of Opposition

      In 2002 a Chicago developer named Neil Ornoff hired the architect David Haymes and his firm, Pappageorge Haymes, to design a twenty-unit residential project on a corner site at 525 Kedzie Street, in Evanston, Illinois, a northern suburb of Chicago. “The alderman—the city councilman—was really fearful of the people who lived in the adjacent building and were concerned about losing views they had across the vacant parcel, so he asked the developer to work with them,” recalled Haymes. “We designed a beautiful building,” but the design required a small portion of the building to be a little bit taller than what the height limits in the code allowed. The site plan also required the developer to seek relief on a parking rule that required a twenty-foot setback from the street to the building face to allow for on-street parking for the property, even though all of the parking for the building was going to be accommodated onsite, within the building, and concealed from view. These were routine and modest variance requests but, as Haymes recalls, “The neighbors simply said no, we are going to oppose the project.”2

      So Haymes went back to the drawing board and redesigned the façade on the side of the building that faced the neighbors, adding articulation and setbacks that made the building look better from the neighboring property but increased project costs. This time the neighbors said, “No, that is a very nice design, but we are still going to oppose it.” So the developer said, “That’s it—we will build it ‘as-of-right,’” which means per the letter of the code and without any variances. Haymes redesigned the building, eliminating the small portion that was to be taller and changing the site plan to accommodate the required twenty-foot setback. He stripped off all of the articulation and setbacks on the side facing the neighboring building because there wasn’t room and the developer no longer felt the need to incur the costs required to curry favor with the neighbors. “We gave them an unadorned brick wall facing their building because we had to push our own building so far back on the property.” In the end, it took the developer and his team more than two years to obtain the approvals required to build a small, twenty-unit condominium project and by then it was late to market. The project opened in 2007, just as the housing bubble burst. The condominium units failed to sell out at pro forma prices so the developer was unable to fully repay the construction loan. The bank foreclosed on the property and sold it to another developer, who converted it to apartments.

      In addition to providing architectural design services to developers, David Haymes and his partner have done some small development projects themselves and Haymes is also the head of his own community organization, so he has seen development from those viewpoints too. “There are still some in my community group who harbor those really harsh feelings about developers; they just don’t want change. They don’t trust developers because anything a developer does is going to be a change, and so they hammer any developer who comes in. Fortunately,” says Haymes, “over time, my community group has become more sensitive and understanding of what development is. We have also come to understand that we are better off having a say than not being involved at all, because if you take the attitude that you don’t want to talk to somebody then you are going to have to live with the consequences.”

      Haymes sympathizes with how the public views developers but at the same time he finds that the whole process is far too distrustful to be productive. When Haymes presents at a public meeting, his job is to support his client by positively representing the project, but Haymes says he almost always fully backs and believes


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