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Permit Reports
2004 Record
Year for New-Home Construction
in Metro Kansas City
Metro Kansas City
home builders pulled a record number
of single-family housing permits
in December, establishing new marks
for both the month and for the
annual rate of new-home construction,
according to statistics compiled
by the Home Builders Association
of Greater Kansas City (HBA). A
total 939 single-family permits
were issued by area cities in December,
shattering the December record
for permit activity and pushing
the total number of new-home permits
for the year over 11,000 for the
first time.
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December
Permit Reports
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Residential
Building Permit Statistics
- Excel
| PDF
Single-family
Detached Residential Building
Permits Report - Excel
| PDF
Permit information
is compiled by the Home Builders
Association
of Greater Kansas City.
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December’s monthly
total was up 25 percent from the same
time last year and easily surpassed the
previous best for the month of 833 permits
issued in December 2002. December’s
activity brought the total number of
new-home permits issued in the metropolitan
area to 11,084, up 3 percent from the
record 10,741 issued last year.
Last year’s
record total marked the third straight
year and the fourth
time in the last six years the metro
area topped the 10,000 mark in new single-family
home permits.
“The housing market conditions
in 2004 were ideal for many local families
to make the move to new-home ownership,” said
HBA Executive Vice President Tim Underwood. “Low
mortgage rates, low unemployment and
high demand for new homes helped make
2004 the best year on record for single-family
home construction in the metro area.”
The biggest trend in new-home
construction activity in 2004 was the
drop in market
share for the area’s three largest
home-building counties. Johnson, Jackson
and Clay counties all posted slight losses
in single-family permit activity, dropping
from 76 percent market share in 2003
to a 72 percent share in 2004. Johnson
County continued its slowdown in new-home
construction, falling to 32 percent market
share. The county has dropped 12 points
in market share since peaking at 44 percent
in 1998.
While the three biggest
counties lost market share in 2003, the
five other
counties in the metro all posted gains
in new-home construction, led by Miami
County’s 57 percent jump. Leavenworth
(up 21 percent), Platte (up 19 percent),
Wyandotte (up 11 percent) and Cass (up
7 percent) all posted gains as well.
All of these counties except for Platte
County have an average new-home sales
prices below the metro average. The average
new home price in Platte County increased
just 1 percent last year, the smallest
increase in the metro.
“We saw a significant movement
in 2004 toward new-home construction
activity in communities where there are
more housing choices, particularly for
first-time home buyers,” Underwood
said. “The ability to provide homes
under $200,000 is difficult due to rising
land prices, higher material costs and
soaring taxes and fees imposed on new-home
buyers.”
Underwood said the ability
to provide the housing choices demanded
by metro
area new-home buyers will be essential
for thriving communities in the future.
“Low mortgage rates have made
it possible for more families to afford
a new-home purchase,” Underwood
said. “With mortgage rates expected
to rise in 2005 and beyond, we will need
to address other factors to reduce the
costs of new homes, such as well-designed,
compact, sustainable neighborhoods that
create a sense of community while reducing
the costs passed on to new-home buyers.”
Kansas City, Mo., finished
2004 as the top city in the metro for
new-home construction
for the third straight year with 1,869
single-family permits. Olathe ranked
second with 987 permits followed by Lee’s
Summit with 911 and Overland Park with
848.
Rounding out the top 10
were Kansas City, Kan./Wyandotte County,
483; Gardner
and Independence, tied with 443; Raymore,
437; Shawnee, 422; and Lenexa, 379.
The
Home Builders Association of Greater Kansas
City (HBA) is the voice of the housing
industry and the source for housing information.
Comprising more than 1,000 member companies,
the HBA represents an industry that contributes
more than $2.5 billion to the Kansas City
economy and supports more than 36,000
jobs in the Greater Kansas City metropolitan
area.
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