Miami Herald (Sunday)

Developers have gobbled up nearly 20 South Florida golf courses in recent years

- BY AMBER RANDALL South Florida Sun Sentinel

A little under 20 golf courses have been or are in the process of re-developmen­t in Palm Beach and Broward counties over the past five years, signaling a growing trend as developers sniff out that rarest of commoditie­s, open land.

South Florida’s booming housing market has left developers hard pressed to find plots large enough for single-family home developmen­ts, making golf courses an optimal option to re-develop.

“The land in the suburban areas or near the urban cores has been scarce,” said Nelson Stabile, president of the Builder’s Associatio­n of South Florida. “If you are trying to develop singlefami­ly homes or townhome communitie­s, it’s become very challengin­g to find land.”

According to numbers from the Palm Beach County Property Appraiser’s Office, there are 104 golf courses left in the county, including public, municipal, resort, semiprivat­e, and private courses.

In the past five years, 13 Palm Beach County golf courses have either been converted or are in the process of being converted. Some of those include the Polo Trace Golf

Course in Delray Beach, where GL Homes converted fairways, greens and bunkers into 325 housing units and the former Villa Delray golf course, where 13th Floor Homes plans to develop the property into a 55+ community with 436 residentia­l units, according to the Palm Beach County Property Appraiser’s Office.

In Broward County, 41 golf courses remain. In the past five years, six golf courses in the county have been converted or are in the process of being converted to single-family homes or parks.

“There is so little land that is even buildable in South Florida, that at this point, golf courses are one of the few options left,” said Alex Yokana, developer at AKAI Estates, which recently built a developmen­t called AKAI Estates in Southwest Ranches. Though they have not yet built on a golf course, they had trouble finding enough vacant land for their custom mansions.

Developers are able to convert public or private golf courses, with each having similar challenges in terms of re-zoning and getting building permits approved.

Another reason golf courses conversion­s have picked up in recent years is due to upkeep costs, explained Jeff Lichtenste­in, real estate agent and founder of Echo Fine Properties in Palm Beach Gardens. Sometimes selling is a more attractive option than maintenanc­e.

“An older public course has to make a decision to upgrade its facilities and golf course in order to charge a lot more. There is usually more return on investment in the 40% jump in homeowner prices than getting 40% more in golf fees,” he said.

The lengthy conversion process

Building on a golf course isn’t a given. Some municipali­ties have zoning laws that must be debated and adjusted in order for building to occur, and a re-zoning process alone can take anywhere from 18 months to 3 years, depending on the rules and requiremen­ts of the municipali­ty and whether there is neighborho­od uproar over the developmen­t.

“It’s one of the biggest challenges in the process,” Stabile said.

As part of the re-zoning process, developers have to submit items like traffic studies and environmen­tal impact assessment­s. After re-zoning is approved, they still have to wait for site plan approval and building permits, among other things.

“Most will have to go through a rezoning process — most golf courses carry a recreation type zoning or may allow a low density residentia­l, which is not attractive to the developer. Zoning change, soil samples, site plan approval, etc., is most likely required,” said the Palm Beach County Property Appraiser’s Office.

Though open land is preferable to suburban sprawl to some homeowners, converting golf courses to homes can bring up the property values for homes in the surroundin­g area, added Lichtenste­in.

“If they are building new homes, it should improve the value because the new homes will be ‘new.’ The latest look almost always brings the value up,” he said.

Not all courses end up becoming single-family homes developmen­ts. Cities in South Florida have instead re-developed some golf courses into parks, like the former Sunset Golf Course, where the city of Hollywood bought the golf course to prevent it from becoming a campground and instead try to convert it to a nature park.

Other times, developers are asked to keep some green space as they convert golf courses into homes. Toll Brothers gave four of the five parcels they purchased to build Century Village East in Deerfield Beach to be built into a park.

What’s the next course that has a date with the bulldozers? EastPointe, in Jupiter, is in the early stages of being developed into about 75 single-family homes. The golf course sold off its driving range to pay for a new lifestyle center and remodeling on the golf course, according to Victoria Lorusso, an agent at Echo Fine Properties.

Interest in the developmen­t has already been high, with builders fielding at least 500 calls about the community, she said.

If the golf course gobbling continues at pace, there will be another four South Florida courses slated for developmen­t by the end of the year.

 ?? ??
 ?? RUTH PETERKIN Dreamstime/TNS ?? South Florida’s booming housing market has left developers hard-pressed to find plots large enough for single-family home developmen­ts, making golf courses an optimal option to redevelop. ‘There is so little land that is even buildable in South Florida, that at this point, golf courses are one of the few options left,’ says Alex Yokana, developer at AKAI Estates.
RUTH PETERKIN Dreamstime/TNS South Florida’s booming housing market has left developers hard-pressed to find plots large enough for single-family home developmen­ts, making golf courses an optimal option to redevelop. ‘There is so little land that is even buildable in South Florida, that at this point, golf courses are one of the few options left,’ says Alex Yokana, developer at AKAI Estates.
 ?? CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com ?? Employers, such as hair stylist Beto Pellegrino in Edgewater, struggle to retain and find talent because of the rising cost of living and apartment rent hikes in the Miami neighborho­od.
CARL JUSTE cjuste@miamiheral­d.com Employers, such as hair stylist Beto Pellegrino in Edgewater, struggle to retain and find talent because of the rising cost of living and apartment rent hikes in the Miami neighborho­od.

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