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Golf Community Reviews
Growth spurt: Brunswick Forest requirement to build guarantees homes, amenities in short term
Tuesday, 29 April 2008

brunswickforestcourselayout.jpg

The Cape Fear Golf Club's 27 holes should be ready for play in 2009.  Tim Cate is designing the course.  (Graphic supplied by Brunswick Forest) 

 

    New developments promise a lot in their marketing brochures.  The designer golf course, not quite yet built; the clubhouse and pool, coming soon; and, for many communities a bit remote from customary services like shopping and banking, the town center that will be opened eventually (presumably when enough folks buy homes to actually use that town center).

    I mention this because I noted something unusual 10 days ago at Brunswick Forest, a year-old community in Leland, NC, just 10 minutes west of Wilmington.  The sign for The Villages at Brunswick Forest, just inside the entrance to the community, actually listed its future tenants - a supermarket, multi-screen movie theater, bank, pharmacy and professional building with health care services.  Other developers would do well to follow the Brunswick model; securing tenants and publicizing their names would give their potential residents confidence they will actually see the stores open one day.
    The advantage at Brunswick Forest, and its ability to negotiate such deals with future tenants of the town center, is deep pockets.  The money behind the community has been furnished by Lord Baltimore Properties, a real estatebrunswickforestfitness_center.jpg development firm that focuses mostly on commercial projects but is putting some of its $2 billion in assets behind Brunswick Forest.  Unlike developers who rely largely on lot sales to finance the amenities, a kind of "pay as you go" approach, Lord Baltimore has the financial wherewithal to ensure Brunswick Forest's development can proceed at a measured, but aggressive, pace.
    You see progress at the 4,500-acre Brunswick Forest not only in the sign at The Villages, but also in the 14 model homes that are open for viewing and built by the developers' preferred builders.  Although some folks would prefer to do their own research to find the best builder, the 14 on the Brunswick Forest list are probably more than enough to make a good choice.  One is even a seasoned veteran of building green homes.  And, smartly, all have built models on site so that their future customers can see first hand their products.  I walked through one model that was solidly built and nicely apportioned, although it looked directly into the backyard of a neighboring home.  Hedges have already been planted between them and, with a few more months, high hedges will make good neighbors.
    The other big in-process activity at Brunswick Forest is the golf course, Cape Fear National, a 27-hole Tim Cate design that should be ready for play in mid 2009.  The club will be private and open only to residents of Brunswick Forest and their guests.  I have never seen so many earth movers in one place; more than a dozen of them were lined up like Centurions when I visited one recent late afternoon, all at the ready to push around the few hundred acres of dirt to carve out

The first golf course lots may be available as soon as this fall.

Cate's latest design.  As I wrote last week in my review of Ocean Ridge, 45 minutes south, Cate is the hot designer in these parts, much in demand for his use of indigenous elements like scrub forests, dunes and tall grasses combined with tons of additional sand that form expansive waste areas. 

    A view of the site map for the course (see above) indicates water will be in play on up to a dozen holes.  Specific details about initiation fees and dues are not totally set for the club, but count on a $15,000 member fee, totally refundable, and monthly dues that will range from about $200 to $500 depending on the level of membership.  Kemper Management will supervise golf course operations for Brunswick Forest.  The developers expect to open a new phase in the fall that will feature the first lots adjacent to the golf course.
    The community's amenities will cover most expected in such a large property, with one unusual addition for those with farming instincts.  An 18,000 square foot wellness and fitness center is already open, with an adjacent half

A community garden will appeal to gentlemen and gentlelady farmers.

dozen tennis courts and indoor and outdoor pools.  Boating and fishing will be centered at the community's River Club, where residents will be able to rent canoes, kayaks and fishing equipment. 

    Brunswick Forest is a good 15 minutes from the ocean, but the community will also maintain its own private two-acre beach club on Oak Island.  Seventy-five miles of trails inside the community will be available to those who bike and hike, as well as a 250-acre nature preserve.   And a community garden will literally provide personal growth for the green thumb crowd, a touch I haven't seen in other communities.  This may come in handy especially if the price of food continues to escalate.
    The emphasis on real estate at Brunswick is variety.  Besides the aforementioned model homes, the community is divided into neighborhoods, each with their own characteristics.  Some include town homes between 1,800 and 2,300 square feet, and others single-family homes which will range in price from $260,000 (for the pre-designed model homes) to over $1 million (for custom homes).  The formula appears to be working:  As of February, Brunswick Forest had sold 400 homes and lots at a total of $112 million in the last 15 months.  Home sites begin at $150,000.

    Another unusual, and smart, aspect to the community is the requirement to build a home within five years of the purchase of a lot.  This, of course, is designed to keep out the purely investment-oriented crowd.  In the roaring ‘90s and in the early part of the 2000s, communities attracted speculators but many of the lots they purchased are still unimproved and have tended to retard the overall growth of their developments.  Because of the requirement to build, that will not happen at Brunswick Forest, whose target market is an eclectic mix of local young professionals and families, as well as retirees, who have short-term plans to relocate.  Brunswick Forest will be almost exclusively a year-round community.  More than 180 families are currently in residence after just 15 months, a sure sign that the strategy is working and the rest of the amenities, including the golf course, are likely to follow shortly.
    Brunswick Forest, 1007 Evangeline Drive, Leland, NC  888-371-2434.  Web:  www.BrunswickForest.com.  If interested in Brunswick Forest or any other property in the southern U.S., contact me and I will put you in touch with a real estate agent who can provide additional information and a tour of the community. There is no cost or obligation whatsoever for this service.

 
Oh blah dee, Oh blah dah
Monday, 28 April 2008

    They say it's my birthday.  Today is the big 6-0, so I am taking the day off (no golf though, it is pouring in Connecticut).  Over the next few days, I'll have something to say about a few coastal communities in North Carolina, including a rare gem where they just lowered lot prices $100,000.

    Until then, life goes on.  Cheers. 

 
Weak dollar drives strong numbers to real estate web sites
Sunday, 27 April 2008

    I wrote here some months ago that developers and others interested in propping up sales in the current weak market would do well to focus overseas, where most currencies are strong against the weak U.S. dollar.  Now, without

Bottom fishing is not just an American sport.

even trying, the CFO of Zillow.com, the real estate web site that features estimates (they call them "zestimates") for more than 80 million U.S. homes, says his company's site has seen a 50% bump in traffic from overseas during the last year.  And more than 8% of those checking out prices of real estate in Florida are from outside the U.S., as are more than 4% of those looking at Las Vegas properties.  Bottom fishing is not just an American sport.  However, some one needs to warn all our Euro friends that, by the time they get here, gas at the pump in Las Vegas might be more expensive than in Liverpool.
    The Zillow exec says all this overseas traffic has come without the company doing any brand awareness advertising at all.  They don't really have to in this Internet Age.  When I plugged into Google the search terms "U.S. real estate prices," Zillow.com came up second on the list of places to check.  It came up third when the terms were "U.S. home prices."
    Zillow, and its rival Trulia, are still not perfect, but they continue to refine their algorithms to come a little closer to true market value in their estimates.  And, according to the Zillow exec whose interview with the Wall Street Journal online you can watch by clicking here, his company now permits homeowners to edit and update information about their own houses.  I just added an update about a kitchen remodeling we did a few years ago and it automatically changed the estimated range of our home's value. 

    However, don't go adding too much to your estimate just to pump up your home's value; you never want to be the most expensive house in the neighborhood, and at Zillow, the world can see not only what your house is worth, but what your neighbors' houses are worth as well.

 
You can get there from here: Ocean Ridge close enough to Myrtle Beach, but not too close
Saturday, 26 April 2008

    Note:  In yesterday's article, we described the wide variety of golf at Ocean Ridge, with more on the way in 2009.  We finish our review of the community today with a discussion of its location and profile.

 

    Ocean Ridge will appeal to those who don't want to be pigeonholed into a homogeneous community.  The community's residents comprise retirees, young professionals and a mix of others, including a number of second home owners who don't want to be tied to private golf club membership and like the proximity to the ocean.  Ocean Ridge residents have a choice between two nice beaches,

Ocean Ridge features a guarded front gate, but I went through an unmanned side gate, making me wonder about security claims.

Ocean Isle and Sunset, both about five minutes away.  The community maintains a private oceanfront club at Sunset Beach which can accommodate a few dozen cars at a time.  If too many residents show up, which is what happens on holidays and busy weekends, public access points up and down the beach are plentiful (and the sand is exactly the same).
    At a point between Myrtle Beach and Wilmington, closer to Myrtle Beach by 15 minutes, and with an entrance on the main north/south route along the coast, Highway 17, Ocean Ridge residents have a choice between two entirely different cities for their shopping, entertainment and transportation needs.  Tourist mecca Myrtle Beach is the lure for loud entertainment options, a little bit honky tonk if you like that sort of thing.  And with another few dozen golf courses within a half hour, any Ocean Ridge resident who tires of his own five courses certainly has a wide variety a half a gas tank or so away.

    Wilmington, on the other hand, offers a more classic southern environment, with a more sedate vibe than the neon, tourist-invested Myrtle Beach.  The essentials of health care and food shopping are within 10 or 15 minutes of Ocean Ridge, although any serious medical issues might require a trip to Wilmington, about an hour away.
    Ocean Ridge provides mostly all the check-the-box amenities you expect from a community of its size, including tennis, indoor and outdoor pools, fitness centers, nature trails and two clubhouses with two more in the works.  For boaters, marinas are off property but nearby; Pelican Pointe Marina, for example, is just three

The confusing array of golf membership programs may appeal only to math majors...

minutes from Ocean Ridge's gate and on the Intra-coastal Waterway.  The entrance to the community off of Highway 17 is gated and manned, but I had to wonder about security since I drove through an un-gated side entrance that featured neither guard nor guardhouse.  It was mid morning but it still made me wonder what the "Round the clock security services" in their marketing materials actually meant and how many other claims might be overstated.
    The community is divided into neighborhoods that are separate, if not distinct.  I saw a lot of brick exteriors one neighborhood to the next, very appealing if not very "beach house."  I expected to see more of the Charleston style homes that feature two stories and a wide front porch.  The few I noticed stood out as noteworthy.  Ocean Ridge has been open for over a decade and most of the community has a grown in, mature feel about it, although a number of home sites (beginning in the $200s) are still available, with many more to come adjacent to the Jaguar's Lair course.  Homes generally begin in the low $400s and proceed up to over $1 million. 
    Summary:  Ocean Ridge will appeal to those looking for a diverse community near a beach and just close enough to centers of entertainment and all necessary services, without being stifled by a nearby urban atmosphere.  The confusing array of golf membership programs may appeal only to math majors, but the variety of golf on property and off will appeal to anyone who swings a club, no matter their handicap.  Ocean Ridge's golf courses are very popular, and I strongly recommend that anyone interested in such a community with public courses spend some time there to determine if outside play will affect your own experience.  
    Final note:  Large developments like Ocean Ridge that have remaining lots to sell are in natural competition with local real estate agents.  If you deal only with the on-site real estate office, you may not see all (or any) of the resale lots that are for sale on the property.  Contact me and I can connect you with a local real estate agent I have personally qualified and worked with and who will open up the entire Multiple Listing Service to you.  There is no cost or obligation to you for this service, ever.

    Ocean Ridge Plantation, Highway 17, Sunset Beach, NC.  Web:  www.oceanridge.com.   Homesites from the $200s, homes from the $400s.

 
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