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Lead slingin' Parrot Head |
How nice for the Leftist bastion of Aspen. "Give us your tired, your SJW woke scared elitist wealthy Leftists..." [note: home pic and hyperlinks at the linked website article] ========= Third-quarter Aspen-area property sales top $1.5 billion Rick Carroll rcarroll@aspentimes.com As the area’s larger private businesses like Aspen Skiing Co. have cut positions and costs and multiple restaurants, lodges and mom-and-pops have needed government financial help to survive the pandemic, it’s a different picture in the local real estate industry. Fueled mainly by residential transactions, September registered more than $660 million in property sales in Pitkin County, closing out a quarter that produced a dollar volume of more than $1.5 billion, based on property records and calculations from local real estate brokers. Not only was the quarter record-breaking in terms of dollar sales volume, according to people in the business, it was equal to or more than the sales produced annually from 2010 to 2014 (ranging from $1.2 billion to $1.5 billion each year), and not far off the pace set the past three years ($1.9 billion in 2017; $1.8 billion in 2018 and 2019). Talk to a Realtor, and they will tell you the data are staggering. “Until you actually see the numbers, all the talk about Aspen experiencing a pandemic real estate ‘gold rush’ in July, August and September 2020 seems wildly exaggerated and hyperbolic,” wrote broker Tim Estin in his monthly real estate market report released Sunday. “Until it isn’t. The metrics are dizzying.” The pandemic largely is the underlying reason for an unprecedented demand for residential property in the Aspen area, with homes selling for more than $15 million and $20 million at an unprecedented clip. September alone netted 21 residential sales in the $10 million to $19.99 million range, in addition to four sales worth more than $20 million, according to an Aspen Times review of property transactions processed by the Pitkin County Clerk and Recorder’s Office. Two residential sales have topped $30 million this year alone in Pitkin County. August saw the $31.85 million purchase of a seven-bedroom, 10-bathroom, 10,014-square-foot home with an average price per square foot of $3,180. Carrie Wells with Coldwell Banker Mason Morse Real Estate was on both sides of the transaction and at the time remarked the sale of 34 Place Lane home “is now part of Aspen real estate history in this already unprecedented year for the industry.” In September, a property at 41 Popcorn Lane —which includes 11,421 square feet for a single-family residence, as well as a guest house and caretaker’s cottage sitting on 2 acres of land — sold for $32 million, the highest price paid so far for property this year in Pitkin County. There’s still, however, another quarter to go in 2020 with the U.S. presidential election on the line, social unrest in America, a shaky economy, raging wildfires and historically low interest rates. Throw in the pandemic, and it has all created a recipe for those with the means to seek a home in locales seemingly more insulated from the strife that has gripped many of the country’s larger communities and cities. Aspen seems to be fitting the bill. “What does this mean?” asked Steven Shane, managing director of Compass Real Estate in Aspen, a recent market newsletter. “People know they can work remotely. Families want a safe, uncrowded environment where they can enjoy outdoor activities. It is apparent that quality of life is paramount.” In his monthly real estate column in Sunday’s Aspen Times, Aspen Snowmass Sotheby’s International Realty broker Scott Bayens, citing the Multiple Listings Services, reported another “nearly 500 properties under contract and set to close by the end of the year. All previous end-of-year sales numbers are sure to smashed.” The city of Aspen has yet to release real estate transfer tax collections figures for September, but it is sure to hold up with August, which generated nearly three times the amount the city collected in August 2019. The RETT provides revenue for the city’s housing account and the Wheeler Opera House. “Market activity continues to exceed expectations and has driven collections close to annual forecasts through just eight months,” senior tax auditor Anthony Lewin said in the city’s monthly tax consumption report issued Sept. 8 rcarroll@aspentimes.com | ||
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Freethinker |
Swell. Hmmm .... Do I want that spilling over the pass? Considering that I'm happy right now: no. Don't want those people here. ► 6.4/93.6 “It is a habit of mankind to entrust to careless hope what they long for, and to use sovereign reason to thrust aside what they do not desire.” — Thucydides; quoted by Victor Davis Hanson, The Second World Wars | |||
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Member |
I hope Lake County denies any permits for mansions. I like that entire valley just the way it is now. | |||
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Fighting the good fight |
It's not just Aspen... The real estate market has been massively booming since the Spring all across the country, thanks to the lowest lending rates in history. New homeowners are buying first homes, folks are upgrading to bigger/newer homes, and people are refinancing like crazy. | |||
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Lead slingin' Parrot Head |
Yeah, I was thinking of you and your little slice of heaven, and wondering about that spill over. As spectacularly beautiful as it is, and the Aspen area is most definitely that, I typically avoid it. However, on one trip I combined visiting with some old friends who were vacationing there with my own 4WD/ camping/ fly fishing trip in the area. Overall, I had a really great time while there...but a run-in with one of the locals on a remote mountain dirt road left a sour taste in my mouth. | |||
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Lead slingin' Parrot Head |
Completely agree on that point...but the difference here is the type of home buyer this area attracts and how that will impact both the local area and state. All the major population areas of the state are seeing the same influx and demand for homes and apartments, driving mortgages and rents through the roof. Home property values are not just setting local records, but national ones as well...but small resort towns like Aspen are just seeing it on a scale never before seen in the area. | |||
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186,000 miles per second. It's the law. |
A LOT of wealth is leaving big cities due to Covid. All of the fancy resort/2nd home areas are booming. | |||
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thin skin can't win |
Zillow sold listings in Aspen Still for sale, plenty in the ~$50MM range.....or just under You can sort those by highest price. A friend of one or my firms owners sold the $24MM one that had been on the market for a couple years. 8 bedrooms, 11 bath in 13,690 feet. I could make that work...... You only have integrity once. - imprezaguy02 | |||
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Member |
I certainly took advantage of the refi. I'll take any break I can get. Cali people have moved here in herds and drove up our property taxes massively. What am I doing? I'm talking to an empty telephone | |||
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Member |
It’s funny how the eco friendly, Sierra club millionaires cry about urban sprawl but don’t mind chopping down the forest for their 10k+ square foot homes and estates. No one's life, liberty or property is safe while the legislature is in session.- Mark Twain | |||
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Member |
I know, I know, its a bit leftist, but I always think of this when I read stories like this. | |||
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