Aspen Heights Partners, a nine-year-old developer based in Austin best known for its student housing projects, is expanding into multifamily and condo development and construction in several markets.
The company has raised over $1 billion in capital, and is seeking land and equity partners to develop and build six multifamily housing buildings in metros with high demand and occupancy rates. Its initial targets are Denver, Raleigh, Atlanta, Nashville, Phoenix, Salt Lake City, and Orlando.
“We have always believed there are opportunities in the Millennial sector, and increasing opportunities with baby boomers, more of whom are becoming renters,” says Kevin Wisdom, Aspen Heights’ Executive Vice President, in an interview with BD+C.
Among the eight projects that Aspen Heights currently has under construction is The Independent, a 58-story multifamily high rise that, at 658 feet, would be the tallest building in Austin and the tallest residential structure west of the Mississippi River. The $300 million tower will include 370 luxury condos and 13,500 sf of retail space, as well as a dog park, children’s area, pool and spa, fitness center, yoga and barre studio, and theater.
Â
Also under construction is a 22-story building with 196 apartments on 8th and Nueces Streets in Austin, scheduled for completion in the first quarter of 2016; and a project in South Austin comprised of six 3- and 4-story buildings with a total of 345 garden-style apartments (pictured).Â
Â
Also under construction is a 22-story building with 196 apartments on 8th and Nueces Streets in Austin, scheduled for completion in the first quarter of 2016; and a project in South Austin comprised of six 3- and 4-story buildings with a total of 345 garden-style apartments. It begins leasing in late 2016.
The firm’s move into multifamily is occurring as this sector’s construction activity continues to drive the nation’s residential building activity. The number of privately owned housing units started in structures with five or more units rose by 21.3% in November to an annualized rate of 398,000 units, according to the latest Census Bureau estimates. Multifamily permits were up 38.9% to 539,000 units, and multifamily completions jumped 25.4% to an annualized 306,000 units.
But Aspen Heights is entering a very crowded field. In Greater Atlanta, 11,000 new multifamily apartments are underway and 11,500 more are in planning stages. Alliance Residential, for example, just started construction on Broadstone Ridge, a five-story mixed-use development within walking distance of the Chattahoochee National Recreation Area and the new Atlanta Braves stadium. When it opens in 2017, Broadstone Ridge will feature 277 apartments and 8,000 sf of ground-floor retail space.
Aspen Heights reportedly has put a parcel of land under contract in either the Buckhead or Midtown neighborhood of Atlanta for a 250-unit high rise. Wisdom is quoted as saying that this would be one of two multifamily projects that his firm wants to build in ATL.
Wisdom tells BD+C that his company “has a preference” for high-density multifamily in “urban-pedestrian environments.” However, it is also looking for infill opportunities that might not necessarily be high rises.
As for competition, Greg Henry, Aspen Heights’ founder and CEO, says that his firm believes it can apply its student housing expertise to multifamily, which presumably would include open floor plans, natural lighting, and upscale kitchens and bathrooms, with the homes themselves integrated into walkable urban areas.
Wisdom tells BD+C that his firm’s products will differentiate themselves by their architectural design and services. Among the design firms Aspen Heights Partners is working with are Merriman Associates/Architects, Rohde & Associates, and GFF in Dallas.
Long term, Aspen Heights Partners has aspirations of being a national multifamily developer and builder, he says.
Related Stories
Multifamily Housing | Aug 24, 2020
Texaco’s century-old headquarters is now a luxury apartment community
After sitting vacant for nearly three decades, the former home of Texaco, Inc. has been converted into a 17-story, 286-unit apartment building in the heart of downtown Houston.
Multifamily Housing | Aug 23, 2020
Designing affordable housing on odd urban lots in LA
"Misfit parcels" could be the key to providing more affordable housing in Los Angeles, say two experienced multifamily housing designers.
Multifamily Housing | Aug 16, 2020
TCA Architects specifies Engineered Floors products for 304-unit apartment complex in Tracy, Calif.
TCA Architects specified Lewis Rigid Stone Polymer floating plank and Lewis Gold 100% Solution-Dyed high-performance fiber carpet for Harvest in Tracy, Calif.
Multifamily Housing | Aug 3, 2020
71-unit 100% affordable housing development breaks ground in Mountain View, Calif.
Van Meter Williams Pollack is designing the project.
Multifamily Housing | Aug 2, 2020
Stantec-designed 17 West mixed-use development completed in Miami Beach
Stantec-designed 17 West mixed-use development completed, with first Trader Joe's in Miami Beach.
Multifamily Housing | Jul 31, 2020
Railings manufacturer VistaPro launches its new website
VistaPro Architectural Railing Solutions launches new website.
Multifamily Housing | Jul 29, 2020
Multifamily construction proposal activity sees modest rebound in Q2 2020
Among the firms that work in the multifamily sector, 31% said that proposal activity increased in the second quarter, while 24% said it decreased.
Multifamily Housing | Jul 29, 2020
San Francisco’s Millennium Tower fix approved, moving forward
Simpson Gumpertz & Heger will be the engineer-of-record for the fix.
Multifamily Housing | Jul 27, 2020
Putting 'home' at the heart of affordable housing
Home is a powerful thing. It’s the place that forms you, a guiding set of relationships, memories, and experiences that, for better or worse, make you who you are.