
Originally Posted by
betts
Or perhaps if land doesn't sell, prices for land will drop. I haven't really looked around at other smaller cities, but in big cities, there frequently aren't a variety of price points immediately adjacent to downtown. You have to move out a ways. But, those cities are so big that even moving out a ways, you still feel as if you're in an urban environment. That's why building in Midtown/SOSA might be a really good idea. I suspect the land is quite a bit cheaper right now in comparison to immediately adjacent to downtown, and if it's going to be on the streetcar line it's close enough to downtown to be a very reasonable location for almost everyone. That's where I'd be buying land, if I was a developer who wanted to build at cheaper price points.
Bookmarks