SPRINGFIELD, MO - While the single-family housing market remains mired in a slump, the beneficiary of the downturn is the multifamily market, as Springfield's apartment building boom continues. There were 1,076 building permits for multifamily units in Springfield in 2007, up 8.5 percent from 2006 and more than double the total in 2002, according to city data. Multifamily units also outpaced their single-family counterparts last year by more than five to one.
Multifamily developers attribute the growth to a combination of increased demand from a steadily growing college population and growing numbers of homeowners re-entering the renting ranks due to the weakened ownership market. They also cited increased emphasis on infilling city property, which lends itself more easily to multifamily development.
"There's just not that much vacant land (in the city), and what vacant land was in the city was skipped over for a reason – there were sinkholes or topography issues," said Ralph Rognstad, the city's planning and development director. "Now people are going back and trying to develop those, and it just doesn't work that well for single-family" because of increased development costs.
Matt Bailey, president of development firm The Bailey Co., said the driving force for his company, as it has been for many years, is the area's college population. The Bailey Co. is the general contractor on the $7 million Phase I of The Villages at Nathanael Greene, which includes 108 units and a clubhouse.
Bailey, who is part owner of 460 units in Springfield and Ozark with father Howard Bailey, downplayed the effect of the economic downturn on the increase in multifamily demand; he pointed out that the growth in multifamily building permits really began in 2002, well before the current economic conditions took hold on the single-family housing market.
"I've read that in a down time like this, when people are having a hard time affording down payments, they usually rent, and I think it will help (drive leasing) in this market," Bailey said. "But it's not the underlying factor. The apartment market has been strong for years." Bailey admitted that the economy does factor in to a developer's decision to build new units or wait, but he doesn't see a huge impact right now from people moving from property ownership to rental. He noted that occupancy rates for his properties have held steady at 90 percent to 95 percent.
Source: Springfield Business Journal