Studying up on college-town real estate

Investors offer tips on off-campus rental housing

Inman News®

Flickr photo by <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/youngmoneymag/2076863098/in/photostream/">youngmoneymag</a>.Flickr photo by youngmoneymag.

Brad Hastings is a landlord whose tenants are expected to follow certain rules: No candles. No American flags hung as curtains in the windows. And for heaven's sake, he doesn't want to find 50 beer cans on the lawn on Sunday mornings.

Hastings' 400 tenants are college students in two small, Southern towns. And he says business is good -- different, sometimes, from the typical landlord experience -- but nonetheless good.

He and business partner Matt King decided five years ago to specialize in developing campus housing. They jumped from their former telecommunications careers into a growing real estate niche that seems to be fed by a rich demographic and economic diet.

It's no secret that the recession has slammed American higher-education budgets, forcing a retreat from their plans to upgrade and expand on-campus housing, which would seem to offer an opening for private providers.

At the same time, colleges are bursting with students. Almost 40 percent of the nation's 18- to 24-year-olds were enrolled in college last year, setting a new record, according to a Pew Research Center report. That amounts to 11.5 million students in two- and four-year colleges. The 2009 data isn't complete, but the researchers estimated that current enrollment would be even higher.

All of those students have to sleep somewhere, and small real estate investors have taken notice.

While the general rental market struggles through the recession, off-campus apartments catering to students seem to be finding more success, according to Jim Arbury, an executive with the National Multi-Housing Council, a Washington, D.C.-based trade group for the apartment industry.

"I wouldn't say it's recession-proof, but it's recession-resistant," said Arbury. "It's still one of the bright spots in the housing market."

Arbury doesn't have specific data on the occupancy rate of student apartments vs. the broader market, though he said it can vary widely by locale.

Hastings estimated that in Rock Hill, S.C., where his company, Walk2Campus, operates near Winthrop University, the local rental occupancy rate is 83 to 85 percent. By comparison, his 275 units in that town are 94 percent occupied. (And his company measures occupancy in number of bedrooms filled, rather than apartments rented out.) It also has another 125 units in Farmville, Va., near Longwood University.

Walk2Campus' business model is based on buying and thoroughly renovating single-family homes that are an easy stroll to class. ...CONTINUED

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Submitted by Vicki Lloyd on December 30, 2009 - 8:29am.

I bought a house with my college daughter that was 2 blocks from San Diego State. We never had a problem keeping it rented in the 8 years we owned it, in fact, the only time it was ever vacant was when we let the leases expire and cleaned it up to sell.

Keeping the rent a little bit under market is part of the secret - the student tenants are grateful and very careful to pay on time and follow the rules. Most of our tenants were in their 3rd or later year of college, so they had at least a little experience living away from home. One year, we had a group that came directly from the dorms to our place, and we got some calls about the light bulbs being burned out! We also kept a home warranty policy in effect to fix any problems with the plumbing, appliances or heating.

Vicki Lloyd, MBA, e-PRO, ACRE, Realtor
http://LiveLakeForest.com
(949) 457-0281

 
Submitted by Michael Duhs on July 10, 2010 - 11:12pm.

There are numerous opportunities to purchase well positioned real estate near college and university campuses, especially apartments and multi-family housing in southern and northern California.

The campuses in southern California, to name a few, are University of Southern California (USC), University of California Los Angeles (UCLA) -- offering excellent opportunities to purchase Los Angeles Apartments For Sale , California State University Long Beach (Cal State Long Beach), California State University Fullerton, (Cal State Fullerton), University California Irvine (UCI) -- offering excellent opportunities to purchase Orange County Apartments For Sale; San Diego State University (SDSU), University California San Diego (UCSD)-- offering excellent opportunities to purchase San Diego Apartments For Sale; University California Riverside (UCR) and California State San Bernardino (Cal State San Bernardino)offering excellent opportunities to purchase Riverside Apartments For Sale and San Bernardino Apartments for Sale. Each of these areas provide a needed housing market for the Gen Y (Echo Boomer)student for the coming years.

The question is, "Is there enough quality apartments to supply the growing needs of these students?"

What do you think?

Michael Duhs
Managing Broker
www.EastWestCommercial.com
(949) 939-8352