logo
Potomac, Md., adds 85 townhouses with elevators, upscale touches

Potomac, Md., adds 85 townhouses with elevators, upscale touches

Washington Post3 days ago
In a way, the new-build townhouses now selling with alacrity on the Rockville edge of Potomac, Md., have been 15 years in coming.
Developer EYA first entered the space that long ago with the Brownstones at Park Potomac, a mixed-use community separated from EYA's new Northside at Potomac only by a small shopping center. Northside continues Park Potomac's aesthetic with English-themed brownstones the developers hope will be just as popular as the originals.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Five plots of land across Cumbria for sale for over £1 million
Five plots of land across Cumbria for sale for over £1 million

Yahoo

time20 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Five plots of land across Cumbria for sale for over £1 million

Several plots of land across Cumbria are up for sale, offering various development opportunities. The most expensive is Willowsmere in Windermere, which is priced at over £1.4 million. This 500 sq/m property has full planning permission for conversion into two dwellings or seven flats, with parking for 17 cars. The site currently has a garden and is in a prime location, with properties in the area achieving up to £8,000 per sq/m. The gross development value (GDV) for Willowsmere is estimated at £3.5 million, or £7 million if both plots are developed. Another plot, east of Manorside in Flookburgh, has a guide price of £1.2 million. This level site benefits from outline planning permission for the development of 32 residential dwellings. The 1.174 hectares (2.90 acres) site is within close proximity to Cartmel, Grange-over-Sands, Windermere, and the Lake District National Park. It is also close to a range of amenities, including a primary school, and has good transport links, with Cark in Cartmel railway station located just 0.5 miles north. Foldgate Farm in Corney, Millom, is on the market for £1,175,000. The property includes a spacious five-bedroom farmhouse and a six-bedroom traditional barn conversion, stables, buildings, and land, extending to approximately 6.62 acres. There is also additional land known as 'Lambground' which extends to approximately 0.59 acres (0.24 ha) and includes a farmhouse ruin. The property is uniquely positioned between the west coastline and Corney Fell in the Lake District National Park and benefits from excellent mountainous views, reaching to the Isle of Man. Currently, the property benefits from a variety of income streams; the farmhouse and the barn are run as a successful holiday letting business. Lot 2 Broadgate Estate in Millom is up for grabs with a guide price of £1.15 million. This includes a productive block of meadowland and pasture and hill grazing on south-facing slopes overlooking the Duddon Estuary at the south end of the Lake District National Park. The plot also includes a range of stone-built former barns and steading buildings. Finally, a residential development site in Ulverston is being sold for £1.1 million. Outline planning permission has been granted for the residential development of up to 28 dwellings on the 1.67-acre plot. The site is located in Ulverston, a growing south Cumbrian market town, close to the shores of Morecambe Bay and the Lake District National Park. It benefits from a thriving and stable economy. The site also benefits from being freehold, and early completion is available. All enquiries about this property are to be made in confidence.

Hampshire housebuilder sees growth despite housing market dip
Hampshire housebuilder sees growth despite housing market dip

Yahoo

time2 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Hampshire housebuilder sees growth despite housing market dip

A Hampshire housebuilder has reported a 'solid performance' despite a challenging market. Barratt David Wilson Homes Southampton, part of Barratt Redrow and based in Hedge End, announced the update for the 52 weeks ending 29 June. The firm, which is currently building Pebble Walk on Hayling Island, and Harbour Place in Bedhampton, achieved a net private reservation rate of 0.64 per active sales outlet per week, up from 0.58 in the previous year. A total of 16,565 homes were completed, including 538 from joint ventures. The group's adjusted profit before tax is expected to meet market expectations, reflecting some margin improvement and initial cost synergies. This performance was supported by a strong balance sheet position with year-end net cash of around £772m. Estimated adjusted item charges for the year are expected to be around £229m, including legacy property charges, acquisition-related reorganisation costs, and CMA commitment costs. The Redrow acquisition delivered cost synergies ahead of schedule. READ MORE: New chief executive named for Hampshire Hospitals Trust Matthew Paine, managing director at Barratt David Wilson Homes Southampton division, said: "Against a challenging market backdrop, we have delivered a solid performance this year. "Our adjusted profits are in line with market expectations, despite home completions being slightly below our guided range, mainly due to the impact of fewer international and investor completions than expected in our London businesses. "We are already seeing tangible benefits from the Redrow acquisition, with cost synergies being delivered ahead of schedule, a new divisional structure in place, and revenue synergies progressing well." However, demand during the year was impacted by consumer caution and mortgage rates not falling as quickly as hoped. Despite this, there remains a long-term structural under-supply of housing in the UK. Matthew added: "Our increased scale, three market-leading brands, and strong land pipeline put us in a unique position to rapidly accelerate volume delivery as consumer confidence strengthens and the benefits of planning reform materialise at a local level. "We remain confident in our medium-term ambition to deliver 22,000 high-quality homes a year, and in the long-term demand for our high-quality homes."

Developer proposes a 'more-nuanced approach' to foreign investment in B.C. housing
Developer proposes a 'more-nuanced approach' to foreign investment in B.C. housing

Yahoo

time4 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Developer proposes a 'more-nuanced approach' to foreign investment in B.C. housing

After the federal and provincial governments rebuffed a call from several B.C. developers to allow foreign investment back in housing, another real estate leader is proposing a middle-ground: enable offshore investment, but 'with a handcuff' and an aim to produce rental homes. 'If we're inviting foreign money back into the market, I would recommend that it comes with a bit of a handcuff, and that would be a requirement to enter the rental pool for five years,' Townline Homes CEO Rick Ilich said Friday. Townline, he said, proposes allowing foreign buyers into the market, but 'under regulated conditions that require their units be rented out through a professionally managed rental program for the first five years of ownership or the first five years after project completion.' Ilich had declined to add his name to a recent letter that was signed by dozens of leading figures in B.C.'s real estate sector, lobbying Ottawa and Victoria for policy changes to encourage more foreign purchases of local homes to boost a struggling construction industry and ensure a steady future pipeline of housing. 'I don't want to say it was a mistake,' Ilich said of the request from his fellow developers. 'But it does misread public opinion.' The coalition's letter, which was sent Tuesday, asked the governments of B.C. and Canada to reconsider the federal temporary ban on foreign purchases of residential real estate and the provincial tax on foreign buyers. The coalition urged the federal government to look at Australia, which prohibits foreigners from buying existing homes, but allows them to buy new builds and presales. The federal Housing Department responded with a statement suggesting such changes were not in the cards. Provincial leaders were even more blunt, with Premier David Eby saying he's glad the old model of foreign-funded speculative development is dead. 'In fairness to the existing government, they took a position which is popular,' Ilich said Friday. 'But we are not going to hit the prescribed housing targets … if we don't get creative with finding other means of having capital enter the market, because there's simply not enough capital interested in real estate in Canada right now — so invite it back, but use it as a catalyst to expedite rental.' Ilich is working on a proposal he plans to present to provincial and federal government leaders. He provided with Postmedia a version of the letter, which says that while he and his colleagues at Townline understand the concerns and motivations behind the other developers' request earlier this week, they would advocate a 'more-nuanced' approach. 'Many factors drove housing prices beyond reach for both renters and owners — unrestricted access to our market by foreign investors was one of those contributing factors,' Townline's draft letter says. 'Today, the foreign buyer ban has swung the pendulum too far, at a time when the housing industry needs to attract diverse and broad forms of investment — both local and non-domestic — to meet our long-term housing needs.' Ilich argues that his proposed program could free up capital for developers to build more housing, increase rental supply for local residents, prevent empty homes, and 'discourage quick resale for profit.' Ilich chairs the Urban Developer Institute, but emphasized he is floating this idea on behalf of he and his company, not for the industry association. He proposes allowing foreigners to buy both presale condos and unsold condos currently under construction or recently completed. 'This is not about bailing out developers. It's about freeing up capital for a purpose, to produce housing,' he said. The coalition's Tuesday letter cited an estimate that only one per cent of Canadian homes were owned by non-residents. But the proportion of foreign ownership appears to be dramatically higher in certain segments of the market, according to a new analysis by Andy Yan, an associate professor of professional practice in urban studies at Simon Fraser University. A Statistics Canada report released this week showed that 4.8 per cent of all residential properties in British Columbia were owned by at least one non-resident of Canada, Yan said, but when looking only at newly built condos that rises to 14.8 per cent in Vancouver, 12.6 per cent in Burnaby, and 15.1 per cent in Richmond. It seems likely that those levels of foreign ownership could put upward pressure on prices, Yan said. 'The question for the federal government is whether it would like to continue on with a game that has created some winners and many losers, or actually create a housing system that houses all Canadians. … Do we want to extend and pretend? Or change and adapt?' It remains to be seen whether governments — and the voters who elect them — might be open to encouraging some type of foreign investment in real estate, with certain restrictions. While Eby's response to the coalition's letter earlier this week made clear he is not interested in 'going back' to the days of wild speculation and empty condos, he seemed to leave the door open to some kind of role for international investment. Citing the cautionary tale of a downtown Vancouver condo project that was fuelled by foreign money and is now facing receivership, Eby said 'that model is dead.' However, Eby also said: 'If foreign capital can help build housing for Canadians and British Columbians, great.' Asked Friday about Townline's proposal, a B.C. Housing Ministry spokesperson sent an emailed statement that said that the province recognizes the 'the urgent need to increase housing supply throughout B.C. so we can continue to see rents fall and vacancy rates rise.' 'While we will not return to previous policies and approaches that don't help people find the housing they need, we are open to exploring new opportunities that support the development of more rental homes — particularly those that meet long-term needs of the community,' the ministry said. 'We are also mindful of the federal government's ban on foreign home ownership, but we remain open to engaging with industry experts to find a balanced approach where we can leverage investments and deliver more homes for people.' dfumano@ Related 'That model is dead': B.C. Premier, housing minister rebuff developers' request for foreign real estate investment Duelling B.C. letters to Mark Carney on housing crisis expose clash over way forward

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store