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Permit Reports
Single-Family
New-Home Construction Slower in
February
Residential
construction in metropolitan Kansas
City was lower in February as home
builders adjust to a record winter
building season, according to statistics
compiled by the Home Builders Association
of Greater Kansas City (HBA). A
total of 825 single-family units
were permitted last month, down
from 963 units permitted in February
2005.
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February
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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Combined with a record January,
the beginning of 2006 still ranks as one
of the best starts on record for local
new-home construction. A total of 1,578
units were permitted in the first two
months of the year, down just 5 percent
from the record 1,657 units permitted
one year ago during the same time frame.
This winter’s construction
season ranks as one of the strongest on
record for Kansas City. The metro set
new monthly marks for October, November
and January, with winter construction
up 8 percent heading into February. The
hectic pace of new-home construction since
October made last month’s lower
permit totals a likely possibility, according
HBA Executive Vice President/CEO Tim Underwood.
“The rate of new home
construction in metro Kansas City the
last six months has been phenomenal, and
we certainly expect the market to adjust
to the growing inventory of new homes,”
Underwood said. “Mild winter weather
has certainly been advantageous for home
builders eager to get the jump on the
spring buying market, and we would expect
that many home builders may have accelerated
their timelines due to the favorable conditions.
Despite the slowdown in February, the
construction market is still off to a
better than expected start for 2006.”
Permit rates have also varied
widely across the metro, taking into account
existing inventory and market absorption.
Single-family unit permits in Clay County
are off 30 percent to begin the year,
but starts in neighboring Platte County
are up a metro-high 84 percent, allowing
the Northland to capture 29 percent of
all new-home starts, ahead of Johnson
County at 26 percent and Jackson County
at 23 percent. Cass County has also started
2006 strong, with unit activity up 13
percent to a market share of 11 percent.
“It is not uncommon
this time of year to see fluctuating permit
rates in different communities, especially
given the strength of the construction
cycle this fall and winter,” Underwood
said. “We expect to see local home
builders exercise some caution over the
next few months as the market adjusts
to the influx of new inventory and consumers
adjust to changing mortgage rates. The
industry is still very bullish on the
region’s long-term prospects, but
we expect to a wait-and-see attitude at
the same time.”
Kansas
City, Mo., leads the metro area in single-family
construction year to date with 364 units.
Overland Park ranks second with 199 units
followed by Lee’s Summit with 116
units. Rounding out the top 10 are Lenexa
with 88 units; Olathe, 81; Independence,
72; unincorporated Platte County, 64;
Kansas City, Kan./Wyandotte County, 59;
Grain Valley, 56; Raymore, 53.
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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