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Permit Reports
Metro Kansas
City Residential Construction Lower
in June
Construction permit
activity for new homes in metropolitan
Kansas City slowed in June as home
builders continue to account for
rising new homes inventories, according
to statistics compiled by the Home
Builders Association of Greater
Kansas City (HBA). A total of 754
single-family units were permitted
last month, down from 1,045 units
permitted in June 2005.
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June
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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A total of 5,264 single-family
units have been permitted through the
first half of 2006, down 13 percent from
the 6,046 units permitted through the
same period in 2005. Despite lower permit
activity, the metro remains on pace to
eclipse the 10,000-unit barrier for new-home
starts for a fifth straight year.
The lower permit totals
come at a time when economists are forecasting
a “soft landing” for the housing
industry from the record pace established
in recent years. With mortgage rates remaining
low by historic standards, opportunities
for new-home ownership are expected to
remain highly favorable, according to
HBA Executive Vice President/CEO Tim Underwood.
“Low mortgage rates
have certainly helped propel new-home
construction to record levels during this
decade and will continue to support homeownership
opportunities for Kansas City’s
families in the future,” Underwood
said. “The recent slowdown in construction
we are seeing is likely the result of
rising construction costs fueled by higher
material prices, higher taxes and fees
on new-home owners and soaring land prices.
The market is undergoing a transition
to clear out inventory and adjust to the
realities of flat household incomes and
slightly higher mortgage rates.”
Underwood said low-density
development patterns have artificially
increased the price of new homes and resulted
in dramatically higher infrastructure
costs for roads, utilities and services.
While mortgage rates will remain favorable
for long-term homeownership, higher rates
mean consumers will be seeking new homes
at lower price points than in the recent
past. Underwood said the most successful
communities going forward will be locations
that provide an array of housing choices
comprising different styles and price
points, ranging from first-time homebuyers
to the upper-bracket market.
“The metropolitan
region has a very vibrant luxury home
market, but our challenge in recent years
has been providing the homes demanded
by the largest group of consumers, chiefly
first-time home buyers,” Underwood
said. “Neglecting this portion of
the market will have serious consequences
for our neighborhoods, particularly as
consumers become more price-conscious.”
Kansas
City, Mo., leads the region in single-family
new-home construction through the first
half of 2006 with 1,118 units. Olathe
is second with 485 units followed by Overland
Park with 311 and Lee’s Summit at
310. Rounding out the top 10 are Kansas
City, Kan./Wyandotte County with 260 units;
unincorporated Platte County, 233; Lenexa,
221; Independence, 173; and Raymore, 179;
and Shawnee, 166.
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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