Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Coastal developers take on monster hurricanes

- NATASHA RAUSCH

Developer Jeff Lamkin knew the risks when he paid $250 million for 63 acres of an island off the Texas coast. But he saw only upside in the quaint little beach town of Port Aransas.

Over the next 10 years, he built Cinnamon Shore, a village of luxury vacation homes fortified by the latest hurricane-proof constructi­on methods. Then Hurricane Harvey blasted ashore, leaving behind $125 billion of devastatio­n along the Texas coast. It was the test every coastal investor dreads. But Cinnamon Shore passed with flying colors.

“To the left of us and to the right of us was total destructio­n,” Lamkin said. “But we had better constructi­on, and so we just held up really well.”

At a time when climate change is being linked to the rise of monster storms, Cinnamon Shore helps explain why real estate developers are still willing to thumb their noses at Mother Nature, with residentia­l sales along the Gulf Coast increasing 60 percent over the past five years — almost twice the rate of the nation overall, according to Attom Data Solutions.

Panama City, Fla., ravaged by Hurricane Michael last month, is the latest example of the potential costs, yet developers like Lamkin still say it’s worth it.

Vacation beach towns like Port Aransas and Panama City are increasing­ly dependent on new building methods to protect against catastroph­ic storms. As older structures get wiped out, they’re replaced by stronger constructi­on that cushions against the next disaster, emboldenin­g developers to keep investing. Buyers are on track to sink about $2 billion into Gulf Coast homes this year, based on the mean selling price, according to Attom Data. That would be up from $1.8 billion last year, and a 12-year high.

Developers aren’t deterred by rising insurance rates, which are largely passed along to buyers and renters, or by more expensive building requiremen­ts. Higher costs have simply “forced more expensive developmen­t” on the coast, said Charles Watson, a disaster modeler with Enki Research in Savannah, Ga. Increasing­ly, coastal beach towns cater to the vacationer­s who can afford it.

A year into Port Aransas’ recovery from Harvey, Cinna-

mon Shore remains Lamkin’s most successful beachfront venture, with “solid returns on every level,” he said. This year will go down as the project’s best yet, with $40 million in sales for homes ranging from $750,000 to $3 million.

On Oct. 5, Lamkin’s Sea Oats Group broke ground on a second resort in Port Aransas — a $1.3 billion vacation community on 300 acres of sandy beachfront.

After last month’s Hurricane Michael, Florida’s storm-wrecked panhandle beach towns can look to Port Aransas for a glimpse of what their future might hold a year from now.

Chamber of Tourism president Jeff Hentz had only been in his job for eight months when Harvey blipped onto the radar screen and started heading for Texas.

After a career bouncing between New York and Florida promoting destinatio­ns from Walt Disney World to Yosemite National Park, Port Aransas had seemed like the perfect place to settle down.

“Port A,” as he calls it, was an underdevel­oped beach town within driving distance of 28 million Texans in the middle of a booming economy.

Even Florida’s coast and New York’s Hamptons didn’t have that kind of consumer base.

With south Texas’ warm winters, Hentz envisioned a year-round destinatio­n where vacationer­s could escape to a more authentic, laid-back beach vibe. Sports tournament­s, business conference­s and festivals could fill the gaps.

Once he saturated the Texas market, he could reach out internatio­nally to Australia and Asia.

When Hurricane Harvey zeroed in, demolishin­g homes, restaurant­s, businesses and even Hentz’s own office, it washed away all those plans — at least temporaril­y.

Hentz shifted his attention to raising $2.5 million in public and private funds to speed the rebuilding of Port A. He quickly formed a new plan:

“This is going to be the greatest comeback story of all time,” he resolved.

It seemed unlikely at the time. Town residents who fled before the storm returned to eerily quiet streets. The air was heavy with the stink of seaweed and saltwater. Boats from the harbor had been tossed around like toys. Palm trees were bent in half and cemetery gravestone­s broken.

Even structures that remained standing had to be gutted, with debris piling up into a four-story high heap locals called Mount Harvey.

Mayor Charles Bujan, 74, had been through several hurricanes during his lifetime.

He remembered Carla in 1961 and Camille in 1969. But it’s Harvey that brings tears to his eyes. He estimates the storm wrought as much as $1 billion in damage to the small island.

“This one was a monster,” he said, leaning back in the office chair where he slept during the weeks after the storm hit.

Bujan surrounds himself now with storm memorabili­a. A hand-drawn map of Harvey’s path hangs on the wall.

A scrap of paper is taped to his clock recording Harvey’s landfall: “8/26/17, time 0307.”

And on his desk sits a wooden carving of the word “strong” — the way Port A sees itself now. In the devastatio­n, residents found an opportunit­y.

Many buildings were destroyed, but they’ve been rebuilt stronger to help withstand future storms.

The RV campground Bujan operates was trashed, which he says gave him the chance to make improvemen­ts he’d long been wanting.

After the storm, business owner Bron Doyle rebuilt his karaoke stage and concession stands and refurbishe­d his fleet of rental golf carts. The whole town is getting an upgrade, he said. “A lot of things that got destroyed are better.”

The idea of recovery was daunting at first. Tracy Ellwood, a 53-year-old manager at Moby Dick’s restaurant, said her friends and family rely on local businesses for their livelihood.

“The sooner you fix things and get going, the sooner everybody can get back to work and start to live again,” she said.

Hentz is still working out of a 60-by-24-foot trailer, but his ideas are back on track. Even with just half of the town’s 4,000 hotel rooms and vacation rentals reopened, Port Aransas recorded 3.5 million visitors so far this year, down from 4.5 million the year before. Next year, he’s targeting a new convention center followed by a sports complex, launching the town past 10 million visitors by 2025.

The Palmilla Beach Resort, started by San Antonio billionair­e Red McCombs in 2014, is again filled with vacationer­s.

Its newly establishe­d neighbor Sunflower Beach Resort remains on track for developmen­t with no visible scars from the storm.

Two miles away at Cinnamon Shore, sales started picking

back up just six weeks after the storm, Lamkin said. For the 140 structures that weathered the storm, only 20 suffered enough damage for homeowners to even file insurance claims.

For Lamkin, Hurricane Harvey was a proof of concept: that with the right building techniques — such as doors and windows that can withstand 130 mph winds, steel rods and straps that tie down the roof, and base floors elevated above flood levels — it’s possible to invest profitably in coastal real estate.

 ?? Bloomberg News/EDDIE SEAL ?? Carpenters trim pine siding for a new home at the Cinnamon Shore beachfront community in Port Aransas, Texas, in late 2012.
Bloomberg News/EDDIE SEAL Carpenters trim pine siding for a new home at the Cinnamon Shore beachfront community in Port Aransas, Texas, in late 2012.
 ?? Bloomberg/EDDIE SEAL ?? New homes are under constructi­on at the Cinnamon Shore beachfront community in Port Aransas, Texas in October of 2012.
Bloomberg/EDDIE SEAL New homes are under constructi­on at the Cinnamon Shore beachfront community in Port Aransas, Texas in October of 2012.

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