Brace yourself. I’m about to unleash a tsunami of data to make the argument that the multifamily market is still going strong, despite all the sturm und drang about the coming global economic slowdown and its possible negative effect on apartment starts. Thanks to economist Danushka Nanayakkara-Skillington, the NAHB’s Assistant Vice President for Forecasting & Analysis, and Robert Dietz, PhD, NAHB Chief Economist, who presented the data at the 2019 NAHB International Builders’ Show.
Multifamily housing starts should hit 379,000 units this year. That’s 2% down from 2018’s 386,000, but well ahead (by 10%) of the average for multifamily starts from 2000 to 2007 and not that far off of the post-recession high of 394,000 in 2015.
Multifamily’s share of total housing under construction continues to run in the mid- to high-50% range. That’s probably because single-family construction has still not fully ramped up, although its slope is still up and to the right.
Rental production continues to dominate multifamily construction. The built-for-rent share of multifamily construction has held steady in the 90-95% range for the last five years. Somewhere in America there are brave souls who are building condominiums and for-sale townhomes, but apparently they are few and far between. Demand for rental at all price points continues to be the guiding force in the multifamily market.
According to the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University,
nearly half of all renters (47%) are “cost-burdened”: they pay more than 30%
of household income for their apartments. Of these 20.8 million cost-burdened
renters, 11.0 million pay more than half their family income for shelter.
Bigger projects provide the bulk of the units in completed multifamily buildings. Projects with 50 or more dwelling units supplied more than half (52%) of the 357,000 completed multifamily residences in 2017 (the last year for which U.S. Census Bureau data was available). Mid-size projects (10 to 49 units) accounted for 40% of completed dwelling units; projects with less than 10 residences yielded the remaining 7-8%. Scale matters.
Multifamily housing starts returned to 107% of normal in Q3/2018. Multifamily starts have returned to normal or above from the market bottom in 2009 in 27 states and the District of Columbia. Alabama is the only state that has not dug out of the trough since 2009.
The senior market may be slowing a bit, but it’s still positive. The NAHB 55+ Housing Market Index fell from a high of 68 in mid-2018, to 56 later in the year. Since any score over 50 indicates a positive attitude by builders and developers, it looks like the market influencers still see senior living facilities as a viable opportunity. My fellow baby boomers and I aren’t getting any younger.
To summarize, apartments are being built, and in goodly number. That’s the rosy side of the multifamily picture. The flip side is that not enough of it is affordable.
According to the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University, nearly half of all renters (47%) are “cost-burdened”: they pay more than 30% of household income for their apartments. Of these 20.8 million cost-burdened renters, 11.0 million pay more than half their family income for shelter.
Hardest hit: single-parent families and those over age 65.
Those are sobering statistics. What do you think can be done to address this problem?
Related Stories
Multifamily Housing | Dec 15, 2016
Multifamily tower in St. Louis uses stacked design to make every apartment a corner unit
Designed by Studio Gang, the building’s stacked tiers will each comprise four floors and fan outwards as they rise up.
Multifamily Housing | Dec 12, 2016
BIG’s first residential condominium in the U.S. completed in Miami
Two 20-story twisting towers comprise 98 units on a three-acre site near Biscayne Bay.
Multifamily Housing | Dec 1, 2016
One of Canada’s largest media companies dives into real estate development
Rogers moves forward on M City, a multi-building, multi-year project in a Toronto suburb.
Multifamily Housing | Nov 28, 2016
Axiometrics predicts apartment deliveries will peak by mid 2017
New York is projected to lead the nation next year, thanks to construction delays in 2016
Sponsored | Multifamily Housing | Nov 11, 2016
Value engineering brings Santa Barbara apartments back on track
When framing estimates for a new apartment complex in Rialto, California, came in too high, a savvy developer decided to have the project value engineered. A switch to glulam and wood-framed shear walls got the project back in the black.
Adaptive Reuse | Nov 9, 2016
Middle school transformed into affordable housing for seniors
The project received $3.8 million in public financing in exchange for constructing units for residents earning less than 60 percent of the area’s median income.
Multifamily Housing | Oct 28, 2016
Aston Martin is making a foray into real estate in Miami
The British automaker will partner with G and G Business Developments on the waterfront project.
Multifamily Housing | Oct 25, 2016
The Beacon will become the most sustainable residential tower in the world
Lumiere Developments says the building will generate enough energy to offer residents ‘Free Energy For Life.’
High-rise Construction | Sep 8, 2016
Construction on the tallest residential tower in western Europe could start early next year
China’s Greenland Group is the developer of four of the world’s 10 largest skyscrapers
High-rise Construction | Sep 6, 2016
Peddle Thorp Architects' solar-powered Melbourne high-rise looks to go off the grid
The skyscraper would be the first in Australia to incorporate solar cells in its façade.