Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

NW Arkansas apartments going up; vacancies to rise

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JOHN MAGSAM

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Some cities in Northwest Arkansas are steadily seeing apartment complexes spring up across the landscape, and the growth doesn’t show signs of letting up.

A recent report on the multifamil­y real estate segment in Benton and Washington counties shows growing vacancy rates with more than 6,500 rental units expected to become available in the next two years, primarily in Bentonvill­e, Rogers and Fayettevil­le.

While many of the complexes built in recent years are in Fayettevil­le and target college students, some complexes in this next wave are aimed at young profession­als who work for the region’s top companies, including Wal-Mart Stores Inc., Tyson Foods and J.B. Hunt Trucking.

Sarah King, a spokesman for Fayettevil­le-based Specialize­d Real Estate Group, the developer of Uptown Fayettevil­le Apartments and Shops, said the apartments on Steele Boulevard in northeast Fayettevil­le were built with young profession­als in mind. The complex opened in December.

The 308-unit complex has one- and two-bedroom apartments and is laid out in a configurat­ion reminiscen­t of a small neighborho­od. It’s located within easy walking distance of shopping, restaurant­s and entertainm­ent, and is connected directly to

the region’s trail system. The place is pet friendly, has its own gardener in residence and boasts environmen­tally friendly building practices.

Rents vary from $845 for the 408-square-foot, one-bedroom Firefly studio apartment to $2,095 for the 1,262-square-foot, two-bedroom Sunglow, which has a premium kitchen, two full baths, a spiral staircase that leads to a loft and a large covered deck, according to the company’s website.

Andrew Garner, Fayettevil­le planning director, said the Uptown Fayettevil­le Apartments and the nearby Watermark apartments represent a growing trend toward more upscale apartments centered on young profession­als and baby boomers. He said that while the developmen­ts have amenities and locations near shopping and entertainm­ent areas that make them attractive, the city’s tight real estate market also limits some housing options and makes upscale apartments more attractive.

Garner said there is pentup demand for these types of rental properties in the region, adding that the city’s long-range plans call for developmen­ts with walkable areas that integrate residentia­l with commercial and retail space. He said these areas are more like traditiona­l developmen­t patterns before Americans became focused on cars and driving everywhere for shopping, entertainm­ent and meals.

According to the most recent issue of “The Skyline Report,” sponsored by Fayettevil­le-based Arvest Bank and compiled by the Center for Business and Economic Research in the Sam M. Walton College of Business, multifamil­y vacancy rates in Benton and Washington counties stood at 4.2 percent for the first half of 2017, up from 2.4 percent for the same period last year. Experts said the 4.2 percent level is still healthy and sustainabl­e.

Developmen­t in Fayettevil­le and Rogers is responsibl­e for the bump in vacancy rates, reflecting additions of new apartment complexes that haven’t yet had a chance to reach normal occupancy levels. Roger’s vacancy rate was 6.1 percent for the first half of 2017, the highest in the region and up from 5 percent for the same time last year. Fayettevil­le’s rate was 5.8 percent for the period, up from 2.7 percent from the same time last year.

Springdale had the lowest vacancy rate at 0.6 percent, down slightly from 0.7 percent; Siloam Springs had a vacancy rate of 1 percent, down from 1.7 percent for the same period in 2016; and Bentonvill­e’s rate was 1.4 percent, up from 1 percent from a year ago.

Mervin Jebaraj, lead researcher on “The Skyline Report” and interim director of the Center for Economic Research, said apartment growth is a direct result of the influx of workers to Northwest Arkansas.

“There simply isn’t any way to house them,” he said.

Jebaraj said that while not all of the more than 6,500 apartment units expected over the next few years will be aimed at young profession­als, market pressures indicate that many of them will be. He said land costs are on the rise, and constructi­on costs are up for a variety of factors, from the costs of importing lumber to the lack of available workers. Higherend apartments, which can charge higher rents, are a way to recoup these costs, Jebaraj explained.

Greg Willett, chief economist for Real Page Inc., a Texas-based provider of software and data analytics to the real estate industry, said apartment growth nationally is significan­tly higher than in past years, noting that in the top 100 metropolit­an areas across the U.S. there are 500,000 to 600,000 apartment units under constructi­on while a typical year would see more like 250,000 to 300,000 being built.

“It’s pretty aggressive,” Willett said.

He said demand for highend apartments is strong across the country. He said these apartments typically are in urban areas close to amenities and target young adults who are the nation’s primary renters.

Rents, he said, depend on locations. He said class A apartments located in the top 100 metropolit­an areas have average rents as low as $800 a month in Wichita, Kan., to as high as $4,700 in New York City. Willett added that when high-end apartments arrive in a region, they tend to result in a general rent increase across all categories.

In Northwest Arkansas, the average lease rate of all apartment types in the first half of 2017 was $642.47, up from $608.88 for the first half of 2016, according to “The Skyline Report.” The report notes that across the two county area there are a total of 735 apartment complexes with about 36,852 units. Fayettevil­le has the most apartment units with 19,401, and Siloam Springs has the least with 1,054.

Bentonvill­e has 129 complexes with 4,986 units, so the expected addition of more than 3,200 units over the next two years is significan­t, increasing the number of apartments available in the city by nearly 65 percent.

In August, a Missouriba­sed developmen­t company said it was building a 235-unit apartment complex in Bentonvill­e with an estimated total project cost of more than $30 million and expected to open in late 2018. It will include six, three-story buildings and will offer one-, twoand three-bedroom units. At the time Lonnie Funk, president of Affiniti Management Services, said the complex will have amenities that are attractive to young profession­als who live and work in the Bentonvill­e area.

King, of Specialize­d Real Estate, said the company is building a complex aimed at young profession­als in Bentonvill­e, which will include 252 one- and two-bedroom units on Southeast Third Street near the Southeast J Street intersecti­on near where Wal-Mart Stores Inc. recently said it would build a new headquarte­rs campus. She said the company expects to break ground by the end of the year.

 ?? NWA Democrat-Gazette/ANDY SHUPE ?? Sarah King, a spokesman for Fayettevil­le-based Specialize­d Real Estate Group, shows a community roof-top space for an apartment balcony at Uptown Fayettevil­le Apartments.
NWA Democrat-Gazette/ANDY SHUPE Sarah King, a spokesman for Fayettevil­le-based Specialize­d Real Estate Group, shows a community roof-top space for an apartment balcony at Uptown Fayettevil­le Apartments.

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