Real Estate in New Jersey
Real Estate in New Jersey
is a very valuable commodity.
Whether you are referring to North NJ, Central NJ or South
NJ; real estate in New Jersey has a tremendous amount of
value. This is if you are interested
in selling or buying.
This is from a recent article from
The New York Times
Signs of an Upturn in New
Jersey
By ANTOINETTE MARTIN
Published: May 3, 2006
It has been a
long, hard climb back to reasonable health for the New Jersey
commercial office market since the Sept. 11 attack in New York.
Cetra/Ruddy
K. Hovnanian is planning this project with 1,300
residential units in Jersey City.
In the weeks after the attack, there was a
belief that businesses in Lower Manhattan and elsewhere in New
York City might consider moving to New Jersey, and a number of companies
offered a flood of space for sublease.
But New Jersey
landlords apparently anticipated a much greater need for temporary space
than materialized, mistakenly thinking that mass relocation might occur.
Then, consolidation and cutbacks by telecommunications and technology
companies in 2002 and 2003 emptied out more offices, and a two-year
economic slowdown amplified the effect.
It wasn't until the second half of 2005 that the situation began to move
in the right direction. The average vacancy rate for office space, which
soared to nearly 20 percent from about 14 percent in the six-month period
after Sept. 11, stayed at 19 percent or above through last year. For the
first quarter of 2006, the rate was 18.4 percent, according to Cushman &
Wakefield, a commercial real estate company.
In addition, average annual asking rents for office space rose to $25.18
a square foot in the first quarter of this year, up 55 cents from the
preceding quarter, and up $1.04 a square foot from a year earlier, according
to CB Richard Ellis, another major company in commercial property. Analysts
there termed the higher rents "a sure sign the market is gaining
momentum."
Still, Andrew Merin, who is vice chairman of the metropolitan area
capital markets group of Cushman & Wakefield, which brokers sales of
commercial real estate to investors, summed it up: "It has not been a
pretty picture for office space over the last four years, any way you look
at it. Things will take a while longer to straighten out."
Mr. Merin said that while his group continued to execute numerous
significant deals each year on office properties, it was currently most
bullish on multifamily rental properties.
"The amount of capital chasing multifamily assets has reached
record levels," he said. "During 2006, we expect to see a renewed
focus on urban redevelopment projects as families look to move to more
urban areas."
New Jersey
commercial office developers uniformly insist that they are bullish on the
office market, given the signs of improvement. Speculative office space
construction has started up again, with one million square feet under
construction around New Jersey,
as GVA Williams pointed out in its first-quarter market analysis, and
another half-million square feet is planned.
Nevertheless, Hartz Mountain Industries, which helped to build up the
state's largest concentration of office space, in Jersey City, decided sometime last year
that that riverfront city could not absorb the additional office space it
had planned to build and began trying to sell sites to residential
developers.
In 2000 to 2005, about seven million square feet of new office space was
created in Jersey City,
but currently there is not a single project on the drawing board, according
to city officials. On the other hand, about 15,000 new apartments are in
the construction pipeline.
Without commenting publicly, Hartz sold one of two major downtown sites
that it owned to the home-building giant K. Hovnanian just last month.
Hovnanian announced it had purchased the site near the Hudson riverfront at 77 Hudson Street for $65 million and
would act as a co-developer of the property to create a condominium tower
and a rental tower, with a combined 1,300 units.
Hartz has been reported to be near a deal to sell a second Jersey City
site to Roseland Properties for a residential project in Jersey City, and
it is also known to be trying to sell a site near the Lincoln Tunnel in
Weehawken.
A number of big developers of office space have, meanwhile, hedged their
bets by opening new divisions that build apartments, or by starting
redevelopment projects that include housing and stores along with office
space.
SJP Properties of Parsippany, which is known for building high-end
office developments around New Jersey, including the two-building
Waterfront Corporate Center in Hoboken, seems to be waiting for the right
moment to break ground for a third building.
At the same time, SJP's residential division, established in 2004, has
moved forward with construction of two condominium towers in Manhattan: one with
250 units at Eighth Avenue
and 46th Street,
and another at 45 Park Avenue
on the site of the former Sheraton Russell. SJP also has a plan to build 68
very-high-end town house condominiums, each with 4,000 square feet of
living space, in Peapack,
N.J.
Two other office developers have big mixed-use projects in the works.
The Matrix Development Group is at work on a $400 million waterfront
development in Newark
that will create 500 residential units in four towers in addition to a
hotel, retail space and a 14-story office building.
The Advance Realty Group is developing a center in adjacent Harrison, planned to include more than 700
residential units next to a new professional soccer stadium, 140,000 square
feet of stores and 190,000 square feet of office space.
Mr. Merin predicts a major surge in rental apartment sales in New Jersey, especially along the Hudson. After several slower years, the
rental market has been increasing, he said: "Occupancy rates have
increased to the low- to-mid 90 percent range in the region."
He also said that "concessions" — like several months of
free rent, or free amenities and upgrades that were being offered at many
higher-end buildings while interest rates stayed at record lows and
home-buying fever was at high pitch — are becoming less common.
"As condominium developers become slightly less aggressive with
pricing, and interest rates begin to rise," Mr. Merin said, "more
people will opt to move into rental apartments, and they will become a
better and better investment."
Tip #20
Home Buying Tip, Knowing Financing:
When you are preparing to purchase a house, even before you start searching listings,
you should figure out how much you can afford.
A Realtor or a mortgage broker can assist you in this process. Realtors very often work closely with
mortgage broker so they can both together figure out the prices you
afford.
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Tip #21
Home Selling Tip, Targeting Out Of State:
When you are selling your home it is a very good idea to let the Realtor
be the go between in the transaction.
When people are involved in the transaction things can become
emotional and a third party can act as a mediator. This works well in any transaction but
even more so in real estate.
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