A new housing model is rising from the dirt in Valencia, California, and potentially raising the bar for real estate developers hoping to reduce their carbon footprints.
More than 21,000 homes are going up in a brand-new community that, its developer says, will be the largest net-zero community in the nation, and potentially the world. In other words, it will leave no carbon footprint. FivePoint Valencia went into planning 20 years ago, but legal battles ensued, pitting environmentalists against real estate planners. Finally, the project is now getting off the ground. “It was really an attempt to change the paradigm and turn the debate with the environmental community from across the table to let’s sit on the same side of the table and see if we can find ways to move forward,” said Emile Haddad, CEO of FivePoint. “We need to evolve with the world, and I believe that this will be a step forward.” The plan at the development is eventually for about 21,500 homes on 15,000 acres, built by big names like KB Home, Lennar, Toll Brothers and Tri Pointe. There will be multifamily units, affordable housing and commercial space, as well as park areas and green spaces. “The environmentalists have been stopping development in this community for literally decades and forced them into almost building a net zero and completely energy efficient community, and now millennials and everybody have shifted to wanting that,” said John Burns, CEO of John Burns Real Estate Consulting. In order to get to net zero, the homes will of course have solar panels. There will be electric vehicle chargers in the garages, as well as spaces to charge shared electric vehicles like scooters and e-bikes. Each home will have a high-performance attic that reduces the need for air conditioning, heating and ventilation. The neighborhood’s pools will be heated through geothermal exchange technology. Recycled wastewater will be used for all irrigation through high-tech sewer pump stations, and landscaping will be drought tolerant and low combustible. That, however, will only get the community halfway to net zero. “You have to be very creative and you have to challenge yourself and you have to think differently than yesterday,” said Haddad. As offsets, FivePoint is earning carbon credits through several other projects costing tens of millions of dollars, according to Haddad. They are launching a methane capture program at a California dairy farm and installing rooftop solar in disadvantaged neighborhoods in Los Angeles County. FivePoint acquired the state’s 170-acre Pine Creek Forest, adding a permanent conservation easement. It is even replacing traditional three-rock cook stoves in sub-Saharan Africa with clean-burning stoves and saving California’s endangered Sonoma spineflower by carving out preserves for it at the development. The homes will range in price from around $400,000 to just over $1 million. While $400,000 is slightly higher than the national median price for a home, it is around half the median for Los Angeles. While the Valencia development is about an hour from downtown Los Angeles, demand is already strong, according to the company. The pandemic created a new culture of flexibility for some workers, allowing them to work remotely or come to the office just a few days a week. In addition, millennials, the largest homebuying cohort right now, are particularly sensitive to their own carbon footprint. “We have demographics that are going to want to be in communities that are environmentally responsible,” said Haddad. And investors who want to be in them as well. “A lot of my clients are saying we’re looking for ESG [environmental, social, governance], and developments like this are going to attract capital, so you’re going to see more people doing developments like this so they can get the capital,” said Burns. He also agrees with Haddad that the social demographics for a development like this are highly favorable. “The millennials, this is their brag: I’m going to be in an environmentally sensitive community in an environmentally sensitive house, and I’m very proud of that,” said Burns. While the development is only slated for 21,500 homes now, it could get larger if the demand persists. In any case, it will undoubtedly serve as a model for other real estate developers looking to find an easier path through myriad environmental zoning hurdles in so many areas. “I believe that this will be a step forward,” said Haddad. “And our hope is that a lot of people will actually start imitating and start raising the bar higher.”
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Pulte Homes has purchased the site of a mobile home park where the developer intends to construct hundreds of new residences.
Pulte Homes has bought the land occupied by the Winchester Ranch Mobile Home Park in San Jose next to the world-famous Winchester Mystery House, according to documents filed on May 28 in Santa Clara County. The parcel totals 15.7 acres and is located at 500 Charles Cali Drive near the corner of South Winchester Boulevard and Tisch Way, county property records show. Pulte paid $50 million in cash for the property, according to documents on file at the County Recorder’s Office. Pulte previously gained approval for its plans to build 688 residences on the land, San Jose city planning files show. The project will consist of 320 single-family homes and 368 apartment units, according to the city documents. The residences will include seven-story apartment buildings as well as four-story townhomes and condominiums. Citing a range of factors that have weakened its finances, Katerra filed for Chapter 11 bankruptcy protection in federal court in Houston on June 7.
Katerra has told employees it plans to shut down, people familiar with the matter said, marking the collapse of the SoftBank-backed company that had raised more than $2 billion to slash the cost of building apartments. Katerra is expected to let go of thousands of employees and is likely to walk away from dozens of construction projects it had agreed to build, one of the people said. The publication, The Information, previously detailed Katerra’s six-year rise and near collapse last year, which included an investigation into the company’s accounting practices by its board and the Securities and Exchange Commission. “Following a thorough review of strategic business alternatives, Katerra has determined that it must wind down the majority of its U.S. business operations, effective immediately,” Katerra told employees in an email Tuesday afternoon. “Unfortunately, most of our U.S. employees will no longer be working for Katerra in the near future.” The company said in the email it was exploring “suspended operations, asset sales and divestitures, in- or out-of-court restructuring alternatives and other possible actions.” Katerra raised money largely from SoftBank’s Vision Fund, the largest tech fund in the world. The startup, founded in 2015 by electronics industry veteran Michael Marks, is the second company backed by SoftBank’s Vision Fund to shut down this year, after financial technology firm Greensill Capital. SoftBank CEO Masayoshi Son last week named Katerra alongside WeWork and Greensill as one of the investment firm’s biggest failures. The company informed employees Tuesday about the shutdown. An executive told employees on a video call that the firm didn’t have enough money to pay severance packages or unused paid time off, a person who attended the meeting said. The executive said the effects of Covid-19, as well as rising costs of labor and construction materials, contributed to its latest cash crunch. In the email to employees, the company also said it was unable to secure debt for construction projects after one of its previous lenders, Greensill, itself went bankrupt. “The impact has been severe – with cash reserves reduced to the point where the current business model can no longer be sustained,” the company said. Last year, the company began exploring a Chapter 11 bankruptcy to address outstanding debts, the company previously told investors. Katerra had planned to raise additional equity from investors by the end of this month after raising $200 million in fresh capital from SoftBank last December in a restructuring that gave the Japanese company a majority stake. The board of directors voted to fire Marks last spring. The company’s most recent chief, Paal Kibsgaard, former chairman and CEO of Schlumberger, the world's largest oilfield services company, stepped down last month. The company is currently being led by representatives of turnaround consulting firm Alvarez & Marsal. Katerra has more than 2,400 employees, according to LinkedIn. It previously had as many as 8,500 before several rounds of layoffs. Reported by The Information (June 1, 2021) |
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