flexiblefullpage
billboard
interstitial1
catfish1
Currently Reading

Production builders are still shying away from rental housing

Multifamily Housing

Production builders are still shying away from rental housing

Toll Brothers, Lennar, and Trumark are among a small group of production builders to engage in construction for rental customers.


By John Caulfield, Senior Editor | January 31, 2015
Production builders are still shying away from rental housing

Trumark Urban’s 27-condo Amero, in San Francisco’s Cow Hollow neighborhood, features a rooftop terrace with a striking fireplace. Photo: ©Christopher Mayer Photography

This article first appeared in the January 2015 issue of BD+C.

For the past few years, several production and semi-custom home builders have ventured outside of their for-sale comfort zones to engage in construction for rental customers.

Toll Brothers, the industry’s 13th-largest builder, told analysts in October that it had plans for five joint-venture projects to build a total of 1,900 rental apartment units, and had another 2,500 apartments already in its production pipeline. The builder’s City Living division has a number of mid- and high-rise rental buildings either operating or under construction in New York, Philadelphia, and Washington D.C.

CEO Doug Yearley said Toll Brothers would contribute one-quarter of the total equity for the JVs. He referred to rental as a market “hedge” that is synergistic with Toll’s core business model.

For more on the multifamily housing sector, read BD+C's Special Report: "5 intriguing trends to track in the multifamily housing game"

In 2012-13, Lennar, the industry’s second-largest builder, launched Lennar Multifamily. Through August 31, this division had completed 19 rental communities, with another 16 under construction. Lennar uses third-party property managers to lease and manage its apartments.

These and other builders—notably Arbor Custom Homes in the Pacific Northwest, and Sares-Regis Group and MBK Homes in California—have delved deeper into metro areas facing severe shortages of rental units. In San Francisco alone, 90% of the 7,000 residential units under construction are rentals. 

It’s important to note, however, that the majority of production builders with townhouses and condos in their portfolios still target buyers, not renters. One of these is San Francisco-based Trumark Urban, a division of Trumark Homes. As of late October, Trumark Urban had nine for-sale condo projects with 1,000 units in the works, seven of them in its hometown. Its total investment in these projects: $700 million.

 

Unlike other production builders that have dipped their toes in the apartment arena, Trumark has stuck with for-sale condos, and has nine such projects in development in California. Photo: ©Christopher Mayer Photography

 

Arden Hearing, Trumark Urban’s Managing Director, says condo customers run the gamut from Millennials to empty nesters and age groups in between––“anyone who values the urban fabric.”

For Amero, which broke ground in San Francisco in November 2013, Trumark Urban offered two- and three-bedroom condos from 1,000 to 2,500 sf, selling at $1,100 to $2,000 per sf. Amero offers what Hearing says is a world-class roof deck. There’s a bike-parking space for every tenant, and a bike shop that’s managed by the homeowners’ association.

Hearing says the firm can be selective about what amenities it offers in San Francisco because the neighborhood itself is the biggest amenity. “It’s transit oriented and walkable,” he says. “I bet there are 15 bars within a short walk of Amero.” No need for an on-site gym either: there are numerous fitness centers close by.

Trumark’s projects in Los Angeles, however, have more extensive on-premises amenities. A 150-unit downtown building, three blocks from the Staples Center, has a 6,000-sf pool deck with grilling, private rooms, and yoga studios.

Hearing says his company has avoided marketing its condos as “luxury” in San Francisco, “where that’s a four-letter word.” But that label might be unavoidable for a $150 million, 77-unit condo project that Trumark broke ground on in October in San Francisco’s toney Pacific Heights neighborhood.

Trumark Urban is currently looking for opportunities in Seattle, San Diego, and international markets. “We want to go where people want to live,” says Hearing.

Related Stories

Multifamily Housing | Oct 7, 2015

BIG designs lush, terraced mixed-use building in Sweden

Cascading glass and wooden cubes create a form similar to Northern Ireland’s Giant’s Causeway rock formation.

Multifamily Housing | Oct 6, 2015

Multifamily completions in buildings with 50 or more units continues to climb

The Census Bureau estimates that 255,600 multifamily housing units were completed in 2014 in buildings with at least five or more units, representing a 37.3% increase over the previous year and the highest total in those multi-unit structures since 2009.

Multifamily Housing | Oct 2, 2015

Utilities should do more to give building owners energy use information

Owners of multi-tenant buildings lack basic information.

Multifamily Housing | Oct 1, 2015

Wiel Arets unveils twin, 558-foot mixed-use towers in Bahrain’s capital

The development, Bahrain Bay Tower, will consist of two residential towers connected “by a plinth of retail, office, parking, and public park space.”

Multifamily Housing | Sep 29, 2015

The developer that planned a mosque near Ground Zero now proposes a five-star condo tower instead

Sharif El-Gamal of Soho Properties is looking to cash in while lower Manhattan’s real estate market stays hot.

Multifamily Housing | Sep 28, 2015

Vo Trong Nghia’s 'diamond lotus' will feature sky garden pathways linking high-rises

The 22-story housing complex in Ho Chi Minh City will have façades covered with plants and a rooftop garden that connects the structures.

Multifamily Housing | Sep 23, 2015

Richard Meier unveils design scheme for residential high-rise in Taipei

The sleek and minimalist luxury tower will offer guests and residents views of the iconic Taipei 101.

Multifamily Housing | Sep 16, 2015

Kengo Kuma proposes ‘carved tower’ for downtown Vancouver

The 40-story residential tower, to be built in downtown Vancouver’s West End neighborhood, will have 188 residential units, "with many units within the carved deductions possessing substantially sized patios," according to Vancity Buzz.

Multifamily Housing | Sep 16, 2015

Quarter-acre of land is enough space for an upscale Chicago apartment complex

The building will hold 90 micro apartments, 40 pre-furnished extended-stay hotel rooms, and a small retail space on the ground floor.

Giants 400 | Sep 10, 2015

MILITARY SECTOR GIANTS: Clark Group, HDR, Fluor top rankings of nation's largest military sector AEC firms

BD+C's rankings of the nation's largest military sector design and construction firms, as reported in the 2015 Giants 300 Report

boombox1
boombox2
native1

More In Category




halfpage1

Most Popular Content

  1. 2021 Giants 400 Report
  2. Top 150 Architecture Firms for 2019
  3. 13 projects that represent the future of affordable housing
  4. Sagrada Familia completion date pushed back due to coronavirus
  5. Top 160 Architecture Firms 2021