Just Listed: Stunning Custom Build in LoHi

 
 
 

Get ready for the ultimate luxury living experience with some of the best city views in LoHi!

This gorgeous 3 bedroom, 4 bathroom custom design build by Workshop is sure to exceed your expectations. Enter into the light filled space and be blown away by this beautiful open living layout. Enjoy cooking in the custom chefs kitchen with walnut cabinets, waterfall island, double size fridge with separate double freezer. Take your delicious meal into the dining space to enjoy with company or keep it casual dining on the oversized island. Enjoy the living room area with gas fireplace then open up the window garage and get the benefits of the indoor/outdoor living space. Everything in this home is custom and the large primary suite with his & hers closet space, large 5 piece retreat style bathroom, is sure to please. With 3 levels, the top level has space for a rec/workout/office room with large wrap around balcony and another bedroom with full bathroom. This home is close to all the best restaurants, coffee shops, boutiques and downtown living with easy access to the highway to head up to the mountains. Welcome home!

 
 
 

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West + Main Homes
(720) 903-2912
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Kathleen Male
(720) 258-5151
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Just Listed: Conveniently Located Home in Shadow Mountain

 
 
 

Welcome home to Shadow Mountain! Everything from the shady front porch to the mature landscaping and even the shutters will draw you in like a warm hug as soon as you pull up to the 2-car attached garage.

Whether you’re zooming into work or looking for an easy commute to Downtown Denver, Boulder or even DIA, with well-maintained systems and a lot of the bigger updates already done, your weekends will be free to enjoy your private backyard and deck. Enjoy all the nearby amenities including the Apex Center, YMCA, Standley Lake, miles of trails and versatile shopping, restaurants + breweries as well as easy access to Historic Golden, Olde Town Arvada and the foothills into the Rockies! Cook for a crowd in the big open kitchen while your friends hang out at the island, play a game in the attached dining area (and admire the built-in hutch) or catch some of the big game in front of the cozy fireplace in the adjacent living room. Plenty of room for guests to stay over, too - with big bedrooms both upstairs and in the finished basement, while you retreat to your huge primary suite. You are going to LOVE living in Ralston Valley!

Listed by Ryan Rice for West + Main Homes. Please contact Ryan for current pricing + availability.

 
 
 

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West + Main Homes
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(720) 280-7926
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Just Listed: Beautiful Townhome in the Littleton Village Community

 
 
 

Beautiful Townhome in the Littleton Village Community.

As you enter you are greeted with an open living area and gourmet kitchen with granite countertops, stainless steel appliances, gas range and oven. Tons of upgrades including a central vacuuming system, light fixtures, upscale window treatments, ceiling fans in bedrooms and living room, ceiling mounted speakers, and an electric fireplace. Enjoy the restaurants and entertainment in Historic Downtown Littleton and the Streets of Southglenn, just minutes away. Get outside on a walk or bike ride along the High Line Canal or in the many surrounding parks.

Listed by Nicole Pominville for West + Main Homes. Please contact Nicole for current pricing + availability.

 
 
 

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West + Main Homes
(720) 903-2912
hello@westandmainhomes.com

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Nicole Pominville
(720) 737-8705
nicole.pominville
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Denver wants to make building ADUs easier, but what’s the baseline?

 
 

As Denver looks to make it easier to build accessory dwelling units, the baseline is relatively low.

Between 2016 and mid-November of last year, there were 227 ADUs that were completed in the city, according to data provided by the city.

The number completed each year varied, and lacked a clear trend:

2016: 33
2017: 43
2018: 46
2019: 60
2020: 37
2021: 8 (through Nov. 18)

Laura Swartz, a spokeswoman for Denver’s Community Planning and Development Department, said data from before 2016 was not available with as much detail.

Still, the data provides context that can eventually be used to assess the impact of the recent push by Denver City Council members to rezone certain neighborhoods to allow for ADUs.

Rezoning entire neighborhoods

Since late 2020, Denver has rezoned three neighborhoods — Sloan’s Lake, Chaffee Park and East Colfax — and efforts are underway to add five more neighborhoods to that list: Regis, West Highland, Barnum, Barnum West and Villa Park.

Prior to this push, property owners in those neighborhoods have had to ask the city to rezone their individual property in order to build an ADU.

It’s likely too early to tell whether the zoning changes have already had an impact. Since Sloan’s Lake was rezoned for ADUs in August, four permits have been issued. Chaffee Park, which was rezoned for ADUs in November 2020, has had no permits approved and no units completed.

Swartz said the city does not have a target number of ADUs it would like to see built.

“Because of the benefits ADUs offer, there are a number of recommendations from adopted city plans to reduce barriers to creating ADUs for people who want or need them, but not a specific goal of how many there should be,” she said.

ADUs cannot be sold separately from the main home, according to Denver city code. To rent out an ADU on a short- or long-term basis, the owner of the property must live onsite, Swartz said, and there are other short-term rental rules.

Denver has also started the process of regulating how ADUs are designed, how they fit into certain neighborhoods and whether changing city code will help people build more of them. Those plans are not expected to be finalized until spring 2023.

ADU industry getting more calls

Clayton McCabe, project manager for Denver-based L&D Construction, said the company has “definitely had more (ADU) inquiries over the past 18 months than we did.”

L&D was doing about eight to 10 ADUs a year, but is slated to do as many as 15 this year.

“Our yearly lineup has been pretty solid,” McCabe said of the ADU work orders. “After the initial COVID hit, we were a little slow, but now we have a full year.”

McCabe said because of Denver’s design standards, L&D doesn’t do much ADU reconstruction, such as sticking a unit on top of an existing garage. He said it can take three to six months just to get permitting and another six months to a year to get the project completed and approved.

ADUs that are built from scratch can cost between $250,000 to $425,000, he said.

“If someone comes to us with plans and is ready to go, it’s going to be 90-120 days (for permitting),” McCabe said. “Some homeowners have to go through (city appeals processes) and request new meetings and stuff like that. We have some people who we’re doing projects with, and we’ve been talking to them for years.”

Mike McCarty, the design manager and co-founder of Denver-based Sustainable Design Build, said his company has been getting a lot more calls about ADUs in recent months, but many of those calls don’t materialize into projects once property owners realize the costs involved.

“When we recontextualize about what we’re building, they think it’s inexpensive and can convert, and it’s pretty much the opposite,” McCarty said. “I think there’s a real lack of correct information out there on the web as it relates to ADUs. I think it’s a variety of factors.”

One of the problems people run into when thinking of adding an ADU to their property is that the structure must be on a foundation, McCarty said. For example, he said almost all garages, which are the first place people tend to look to build the addition, sit on a slab of concrete and not a foundation.

McCarty said most of his company’s clients finance their ADUs with home equity loans or cash-out refinances on the main dwelling. This gives them more flexibility by using their own money, he said.

What it’s like for a property owner to build an ADU

Outside Denver city limits, Damian Alcazar completed the first accessory dwelling unit to be built in Aurora on his property at 12th Avenue and Ironton Street last year.

“We saw the opportunity of building affordable housing for a fraction of what it would cost us to build it or buy it in another area,” Alcazar said.

It took 19 months for him to complete the project, but Alcazar said he finished the 650-square-foot unit for less than $100,000. A woodworker, he said he was able to shave off much of the costs by building the woodwork himself for the kitchen, and getting help from industry friends. He also bought construction materials before the COVID-19 pandemic and the resulting supply chain backup.

“I saw the numbers and thought, wow. It sounded outrageous to us,” Alcazar said about when he first explored the costs of ADUs.

Alcazar said he rents the unit to a family of Afghan refugees.

He said people should take their time and do their research before embarking on an ADU, as frustrating obstacles are unavoidable. He said he hired a general contractor who he had to let go in the middle of the project.

“Select the people you’re going to work with very carefully, and give yourself some leeway money-wise and time-wise — especially if you don’t have any knowledge or experience with construction,” he said.

Learn more about ADU’s on The Denver Post.

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2021 Price Surges Yield Record-Level Profits for Home Sellers, Report Says

 
 

It’s no secret that 2021 was a banner year for real estate sales, but a new report from ATTOM Data Solutions indicates that homeowners that were willing to sell last year reeled in a profit that hasn’t been seen in more than a decade.

ATTOM released its Year-End 2021 U.S. Home Sales Report on Jan. 27, which shows that home sellers realized a profit of $94,092 on the typical sale in 2021—up 45% from 2020 and up 71% from two years ago.

Based on median purchase and resale prices, experts said the profit increase marked the highest level in the United States since at least 2008.

Major takeaways

  • National median home prices rose 16.9% in 2021 to $301,000, causing profits to surge.

  • Profits margins rose in nearly 90% of the nation—150 of the 173 metro areas with sufficient data to analyze.

  • Homeownership tenure dipped to a nearly 10-year low of 6.14 years.

  • One of every three single-family house and condo sales in 2021 was an all-cash purchase—a six-year high.

  • Institutional investing accounted for one of every 14 single-family home and condo sales in 2021 in the U.S.—an eight-year high.

  • Federal Housing Administration sales hit their lowest levels in 14 years.

What this means

Frenzied market behavior filled headlines last year as pandemic-induced stimulus and historically low mortgage rates helped fuel demand for a finite number of homes for sale.

According to the report, a surge of buyers financially unscathed by the pandemic flooded the market throughout 2021. The intense competition for a tight supply of homes contributed to a price surge that proved to be a boon for sellers who were able to reel in nearly $95,000 in profit for their homes.

“What a year 2021 was for home sellers and the housing market all around the U.S.,” said Todd Teta, chief product officer at ATTOM, in a statement. “Prices went through the roof, kicking profits and profit margins up at a pace not seen for at least a decade. All that happened as the virus pandemic raged on, which actually helped drive the increases instead of stifling them. Households that escaped job losses from the pandemic dove into the market, in large part as a response to the crisis. And the rising demand led the market boom onward.”

While 2021 was a record-setting year for price gains and profit margins, ATTOM noted that there are signs that prices could flatten out in this year as declining affordability, lower investor profits, and rising foreclosure activity contributes to a market cooldown that began in the fall.

The report stated that that was layered over with rising inflation and likely increases in mortgage rates this year.

A silver lining is that the current imbalance in demand and supply suggests there is room for at least some additional price gains.

“No doubt, there are warning signs that the surge could slow down this year,” Teta said. “But 2021 will go down as one of the greatest years for sellers and one of the toughest for buyers.”

Keep reading.

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