IN THE NEWS!
The first article, Valley development corridors show huge potential, from the Phoenix Business Journal, reports that there are numerous growth corridors in the metro Phoenix area that are spurring developers to develop new projects. New opportunities will develop where the Loop 202 is extended in the East Valley, along the Loop 303 in the West Valley, the Grand Avenue corridor in Surprise, the Sun Valley Parkway corridor in Buckeye, the Westgate development corridor along the Loop 101, and along the light rail route in Phoenix, Mesa and Tempe. Michael Chasse, a principal with Arizona Land Advisors stated that 10,000 lots are planned along the northern part of Sun Valley Parkway, making that area "one of the hottest markets to come along, for new homes." North of Grand Ave., north of Surprise, Lennar just announced its plans for Asante, a new 3,600-acre master-planned community, including a 1 million-square-foot shopping center. Colton Commercial Chief Executive Dan Colton stated that commercial and industrial opportunities are predicted in areas near new residential projects in the West Valley, where about 60 percent of the region's residential construction is occurring. "The West Valley is a magnet for east Los Angeles," he said.
http://phoenix.bizjournals.com/phoenix/stories/2006/05/29/focus1.html?t=printable
The second article, Northwest Valley dodging housing downturn, from the Arizona Republic, reports that while most of the Valley is seeing a drop in new home permits, the Northwest Valley is appearing to escape the slide. "There's no slowdown," said Greg Burger of RL Brown Housing Reports. "It's exactly the same as last month, two months before that and the month before that," he added. Valleywide, the permit numbers are much different, with overall permits dropping 17.5 percent year to date. Steven Kraut of Scottsdale, a real estate investment specialist, said the Valley's slowdown can be attributed to higher construction costs, a cooling real estate market spurred by rising interest rates, and existing homeowners wary about diving into the new home market. He remains optimistic though, saying that the Valley's population boom, job growth and retail and commercial expansion suggest it's only a matter of time before the market picks up again.
http://www.azcentral.com/php-bin/clicktrack/print.php?referer=http://www.azcentral.com/community/glendale/articles/0527gl-brown27Z2.html
