Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

Housing stories similar on both sides of Nev.-Ariz. line

- By Eli Segall Contact Eli Segall at esegall@ reviewjour­nal.com or 702-383-0342. Follow @eli_segall on Twitter.

Kingman, Arizona, is about 100 miles from Las Vegas and a fraction of its size. But their homebuildi­ng markets in many ways have been mirror images.

In both places, a rapid accelerati­on in the mid-2000s was followed by a devastatin­g crash, and the current recovery is nowhere close to recouping all its losses.

In Kingman, builders pulled 190 residentia­l permits in 2000, 910 in 2005 and just 35 in 2010. They pulled 286 permits last year, city data show.

In Clark County, builders sold around 20,500 homes in 2000, almost 39,000 in 2005 and just 3,900 in 2011. Last year they sold 9,400 homes, according to Home Builders Research.

Kingman builder George Ripps, co-owner of Fripps Homes, said his city’s home constructi­on market is “good but not great.” As he sees it, Kingman doesn’t have enough industry and relies too heavily on West Coast retirees to buy houses.

Ripps sold 35 to 40 homes a year at the peak of the boom. At the depths of the recession, he sold just one or two annually and came close to going out of business. He now sells almost 20 houses per year.

Mortgage lending isn’t nearly as loose as it was during the bubble years, crimping sales volume. Moreover, Ripps said, the city couldn’t afford to keep up with rapid growth.

But as for the market overall, he said, “Kingman is moving in the right direction.”

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 ?? Michael Quine Las Vegas Review-Journal ?? Builder George Ripps says the home constructi­on market in Kingman, Arizona, is “good but not great.”
Michael Quine Las Vegas Review-Journal Builder George Ripps says the home constructi­on market in Kingman, Arizona, is “good but not great.”

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