The Oklahoman

Former homeowners

Why these Oklahomans gave up houses to rent apartments

- Richard Mize Real Estate Editor

Jake and Kristin Fisher started out their marriage by buying a house — because they didn’t know any better. ● “We felt like that was what we were supposed to do,” Jake Fisher said. “That’s what a married couple did.” ● Now they rent an apartment — by choice. ● Others may feel “stuck” in an apartment while home prices spike across the Oklahoma City area. In the past year, prices jumped 15%, according to the Metro Associatio­n of Realtors. ● But apartment rents have risen here no more than usual, with one-bedroom units up 3.1% and two-bedroom units up 2.5% year over year, according to Capstone Cos. ● The Fishers have a message for anyone feeling stuck as a renter. ● Apartment life’s not bad. In fact, it can be pretty good. Renting on purpose

The Fishers, who are in their late 40s, started out in a four-bedroom, two-bath house in Norman. But after several years, work drew them to Oklahoma City. He’s president and a partner in Bridges Strategies & Digital Marketing, just west of downtown. She is an administra­tor at Westminste­r School, about 5 miles north.

They landed in an apartment downtown at what is now Aviare Arts District Apartment Homes.

“The idea was to rent for a year,” he said, then decide where, and whether, to buy another house.

Seven years later, they moved — to another apartment downtown, at Level Urban Apartments. They’ve been there about a year, and are in no hurry to buy. Maybe in 2022, and if so, they want to remain close to the urban core of the city.

Fisher said they got spoiled early by apartment living, especially when it came to maintenanc­e.

“If a light bulb went out, we’d just let them know and they’d take care of it,” he said.

The Fishers know prudent homeowners­hip can build wealth, but for now they have other investment­s, and the allure of not having to make home repairs and deal with other expenses of owning a house keeps them happily renting.

The sheer time it takes to take care of a home and lawn is part of it.

“We’re so busy. She’s busy. I’m busy,” Fisher said.

Uncle Sam wants you to buy, not rent

The government wants the Fishers — and you — to own a home, not rent an apartment, especially since the national homeowners­hip rate hasn’t recovered from the housing crash and Great Recession of 20072009.

In 2010 it was about 63.5% in Oklahoma County. By 2019, it was still less than 60.5%, according to the Federal Reserve.

Government interventi­on is largely why single-family houses dominate the housing stock.

The mortgage interest tax deduction is just one of many policies at all levels of government promoting home ownership. Entire agencies, federal and state, support it, although they also aid in the developmen­t of rental property, because homeowners­hip lends stability to neighborho­ods — by extension, to society in general.

Proponents say homeowners­hip is the main way many people accumulate wealth, building up equity over the years, partly paying themselves each month rather than a landlord.

John Arnhart has been there, done that, and is done with it.

A house is not a bank

Arnhart, 50, owned a home for 20 years, rented an apartment the past five years, and has no intention of buying again.

“It was my wife and I. When we split, I didn’t want another one,” said Arnhart, who is in chemical sales and lives at The Trails at Rockwell, 14600 N Rockwell Ave.

He said he wanted to be able to come and go and not have to worry about a property. On the other hand, he said, owning a house does have its advantages.

“It’s in your name and you can do with it what you want, add on if you want. And you have a garage, and more storage,” he said. “It lets you spread your wings a little bit.”

But the downside to owning, to Arnhart, is what many people consider the main upside to homeowners­hip: growing wealth.

Whatever equity accumulate­s is hard to access, he said, and it doesn’t add up as much as people think considerin­g the expenses of owning and maintainin­g a house over time.

“I save liquid money instead of giving it to the bank,” he said, meaning a mortgage lender.

“Actually, I’m saving money, but it’s in the bank,” he said, meaning his own bank account.

Short supply

Now there’s a housing shortage. Blame the coronaviru­s for much of it. Lumber mills and manufactur­ers shut down a year ago expecting a monthslong constructi­on slowdown if not an outright housing crash.

Instead, the Federal Reserve poured money into secondary mortgage markets — another way the government encourages homeowners­hip — to keep interest rates low. It sparked a boom in demand for houses, both new and previously occupied.

It’s also caused prices for lumber, among other materials, to explode, home prices to spike, and it’s extended the time it takes to build a house.

The Oklahoma City metro area had 475,483 single-family houses in 2017, the most recent year statistics were readily available, according to the National Associatio­n of Home Builders.

About 100,000 of them were built since 1998, according to calculatio­ns based on monthly statistics provided to The Oklahoman by Norman

based Dharma Inc., publisher of metro-area constructi­on data.

Apartment homes comprised a fraction of constructi­on in the same period. Just 92,297 apartment units were built here going all the way back to 1960, according to statistics from brokers William Forrest and David Dirkschnei­der with Capstone Cos.

“There was a large building boom between 1960-1985, followed by a lull between 1986-2000, and then there’s been a surge again starting after 2000,” Dirkschnei­der said.

There was more than a lull in those middle years. After the oil market collapse and real estate crash in the mid-1980s, no apartments were built at all in 1987, 1989, 1990, 1991 or 1992, according to Capstone.

Apartment occupancy here fell to 76% on average, according to CBRE. That wasn’t enough to stay afloat, and most complexes went into foreclosur­e.

The oil boom lifted the whole metroarea economy and fueled an apartment building boom, with 22,200 units added in the first half of the 1980s, said Mike Buhl, broker-owner of multifamil­y property brokerage Commercial Realty Resources Co. in Norman.

“But the decade of the 1980s proved to be the best and the worst: the

richest oil and gas boom and one of the worst economic declines,” Buhl said. “The decade of the ‘80s began with record growth in bank assets and profits and quickly turned into protracted losses, bank closures and mergers.

“The oil crash of 1985-86 then wreaked havoc on Oklahoma’s economy. By the late ‘80s and early 1990s probably every apartment community in the metro faced some level of distress or foreclosur­e.”

Buhl said his first sale, in 1987, was a foreclosed apartment complex.

Forrest also was getting started about the same time, also with foreclosed apartments.

“Some of the data from the ‘80s is pretty crazy as far as rents, vacancies and the low average prices per unit back then,” Forrest said. “During my career I have sold for over 50 different lenders, which mostly relates back to the ‘80s and early ‘90s as the majority of apartment complexes in Oklahoma went through foreclosur­e back then.”

It was nearly the turn of the millennium before apartment constructi­on started to come back, and it did so prominentl­y over the next 10 years, “taking the industry to new highs,” Buhl said. “That decade added another 12,000 units to the market and really set the stage for the next large building boom.”

Since 2011, 21,500 units have been added to the market, he said, bringing the metro-area inventory to about 103,000 individual apartments, and growing.

The surge in constructi­on coincided with — and helped boost — downtown’s revival, which arose with the Metropolit­an Area Projects. MAPS started in 1993 with a city vote to spend $350 million on a new downtown library, Bricktown canal and ballpark, low-water dams on the

Oklahoma River and an NBA arena downtown.

“Just look at the progressio­n of downtown Oklahoma City when Deep Deuce Apartments were first built in 2001, and how that has spurred numerous new high-end communitie­s,” Buhl said. “It has transforme­d the skyline and helped depressed areas of downtown become thriving communitie­s with retail, restaurant­s and businesses.”

Downtown embraced luxury apartment living and the urban lifestyle as part of its renaissanc­e.

Jim Holman and Danita Rose love it.

Renaissanc­e lifestyle

Holman, 70, owned a home in upscale Heritage Hills for 20 years. Now, he and Rose, 59, are in their fifth year together, fourth year of renting an apartment downtown, and their third year of living at 5th Avenue Lofts, 601 N Broadway Ave.

Holman, a retired automotive sales executive, and Rose, executive vice president of Oklahoma City Community College, are sold on renting. They’re in their second apartment home. They lived at Carnegie Center, 131 Dean A. McGee, for a year.

Holman said renting isn’t without its challenges, but it gives freedoms that he didn’t have as a homeowner.

“Every once in a while you can hear a neighbor. But when we hear a lawnmower running, we know we don’t own it or pay for the gas to run it,” he said.

Heritage Hills is walking distance from downtown, on the north side, but their 5th Avenue Lofts apartment has them even closer to where the action is in the urban core.

“We love to walk downtown, and its only 3/4 mile to Scissortai­l Park,” he said.

But luxury apartment living in Oklahoma City isn’t limited to downtown.

Amen to Amenities

Buhl said homeowners’ complaints about proposed new apartment complexes near their single-family neighborho­ods are often off base if they think it will decrease property values.

“Apartment communitie­s today have amenities like none other,” Buhl said. “From the late 1960s to early ‘70s when a swimming pool was considered an amenity, today we have private parking structures, rooftop pools, outdoor lounges, business centers and elegant clubhouses. Many of the properties built today are truly lifestyle communitie­s.”

New offerings are worlds away from “early-vintage apartments when flat mansard roofs dotted the landscape and cedar shake shingles were a preferred building material,” he said. Nowadays, apartment renters are all about the amenities.

Take 35 Degrees North Apartment Homes, 371 upscale units under constructi­on at 2800 NW 192, by Kirkland, Washington-based Weidner Apartment Homes.

35 Degrees North, a large complex of three-story apartment buildings amid a swath of single-family homes, towers over its outlying suburban neighbors because of a rise in the land just west of the Edmond city limits southeast of NW

192 and May Avenue.

Community amenities include two swimming pools, a pool house and cabanas, a poolside grilling station and fire pits, fitness center, basketball court, pickle ball court, pet washing station, dog park and a clubhouse.

Apartments feature high ceilings; a “luxury kitchen” with tile back splash, an island, “designer” lighting, stainlesss­teel appliances, and granite counters; full-size washer and dryer; a patio or balcony; a soaking tub in the master bedroom; walk-in closets; ceiling fans in every bedroom; picture windows and full-view glass doors; and USB outlets.

Buhl said 35 Degrees North one-bedroom apartments rent for $1,005 to $1,105 per month, and two-bedroom units go for $1,200 to $1,275 per month.

“The reality is that all things being equal, any one of these residents could purchase a home for a similar monthly payment,” he said.

Pandemic panic

Where is the apartment industry headed in 2021?

It had its own coronaviru­s scare — the fear of waves of evictions of jobless renters, staved off so far by government­imposed eviction moratorium­s, as well as surprising numbers of renters who managed to keep their rent paid up.

“We have seen a pretty strong bounce back from the beginning days of COVID-19 with an overall positive sentiment around the sector,” Buhl said. “While not back to pre-COVID unemployme­nt levels near 3%, the economy has performed very well, and the apartment industry is no exception.”

What about the coronaviru­s-related federal moratorium on evictions? The moratorium, extended several times, is now set to end June 30.

Even with the moratorium, by the end of May statewide 30,685 eviction cases had been filed and 12,189 granted since the state declared an emergency on March 15, 2020, according to nonprofit Open Justice Oklahoma.

By the end of May, landlords in Oklahoma County had filed 11,261 eviction cases, and 3,109 had been granted; Cleveland County had 2,196 filed and 926 granted. Canadian County had 596 filed and 275 granted.

Buhl said the high number of filings relative to evictions doesn’t tell the whole story.

“Even though a landlord may have filed an eviction, doesn’t mean the tenant didn’t eventually pay the rent or enter some type of payment plan,” he said. “Oftentimes the landlord will file the eviction just to protect their interest. I think the numbers prove that out.”

“Tenants … have prioritize­d rent payments. Let’s be honest, if tenants on a broad scale had stopped paying rent, as many expected would happen early in the pandemic, the market would have stumbled, causing a spiral effect. But the opposite happened, and rent collection­s remained good and occupancy levels remained strong. Those dynamics have continued into 2021.”

Chad Straub has been on all sides of housing because of different dynamics: He was a homeowner, then an apartment renter and now rents a house.

Bad dream

Straub, 42, grew up in Edmond and lived in an apartment in Norman while attending the University of Oklahoma. He bought his first house in 2009, a three-bedroom house built in 1954 in Oklahoma City.

“Oh, it’s the American dream! I needed to get my piece of the American dream,” he remembers thinking.

In 2015, he sold the old house and used his equity and credit to buy a new one. Then came a nightmare.

Straub was working in banking regulatory compliance. He quit his job and started a business — but it failed. He had to sell his house to get by. With his job went his credit, so he couldn’t even borrow against the suddenly illiquid wealth in his own property.

“All my nest egg I had left was tied up in the equity I had in my house. I really had no choice,” he said.

He moved into an apartment. Now, he’s renting a house to get away from the noise of apartment neighbors, and for its fenced back yard for Sophie, his 11-year-old long-haired Dachshund.

As a renter, Straub is living an irony: He works selling houses as a real estate agent.

Real Estate Editor Richard Mize edits The Oklahoman’s Real Estate section, and covers housing, constructi­on, commercial real estate, and related topics for the newspaper and Oklahoman. com. Contact him at rmize@oklahoman.com. Please support his work and that of other Oklahoman journalist­s by purchasing a subscripti­on at http://subscribe.oklahoman.com.

 ?? PROVIDED BY JAKE FISHER ?? Kristin and Jake Fisher, who owned a home in Norman but now live at Level Urban Apartments at 123 NE 2 in downtown Oklahoma City.
PROVIDED BY JAKE FISHER Kristin and Jake Fisher, who owned a home in Norman but now live at Level Urban Apartments at 123 NE 2 in downtown Oklahoma City.
 ?? CHRIS LANDSBERGE­R/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? 35 Degrees North Apartment Homes, an upscale complex, is under constructi­on at 2800 NW 192.
CHRIS LANDSBERGE­R/THE OKLAHOMAN 35 Degrees North Apartment Homes, an upscale complex, is under constructi­on at 2800 NW 192.
 ??  ??
 ?? BRYAN TERRY/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? West Village, upscale apartments built in 2018-2020 at 835 W. Sheridan Ave. in west downtown.
BRYAN TERRY/THE OKLAHOMAN West Village, upscale apartments built in 2018-2020 at 835 W. Sheridan Ave. in west downtown.
 ?? PROVIDED ?? Jim Holman and Danita Rose. Holman owned a home in Heritage Hills. Now, he and Rose live in an apartment at 5th Avenue Lofts, at 601 N. Broadway Ave. downtown.
PROVIDED Jim Holman and Danita Rose. Holman owned a home in Heritage Hills. Now, he and Rose live in an apartment at 5th Avenue Lofts, at 601 N. Broadway Ave. downtown.
 ??  ?? Buhl
Buhl
 ??  ?? Forrest
Forrest
 ??  ?? Dirkschnei­der
Dirkschnei­der

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