Archive for April, 2010

Airport Update

Friday, April 30th, 2010

Janet Watermeier, executive director of the Bay County Economic Development Alliance, says one company, Coast WET of California, has already moved its headquarters to the area; two others are considering airport locations. “We’re out in the market now talking to real estate and corporate executives,” says Kevin Johnson, St. Joe vice president for economic development.

St. Joe itself is moving its headquarters to a site adjacent to the airport, relocating from its 75-year home in Jacksonville. The new headquarters, scheduled for completion by summer 2011, will also consolidate offices from Tallahassee, Port St. Joe and south Walton County.

Business leaders predict the airport eventually will form the nucleus of an entire new central business district. The facility also will help capture tourists from far outside the southeast market and lead to a surge in industrial development, they say. “It will be an airport city,” says airport director Randy Curtis.

St Joe’s Future at New Airport

Tuesday, April 13th, 2010

By Mark Basch
PANAMA CITY – Wearing a hard hat amid the construction dust of the passenger terminal for the new Northwest Florida International Beaches Airport, it’s hard to imagine that Southwest Airlines’ first flight out of Panama City will take off on schedule on May 23. But Airport Authority Chairman Joe Tannehill insists the new airport will open as planned next month.

“We’ll make it. The windows may not be washed, but we’ll make it,” he said.

They’d better. This is the first international airport built in the U.S. in 15 years, so it’s receiving a lot of attention.

“In my view, it’s not an option. It’s [May 23] a fixed date,” said Lisa Walters, a Panama City attorney who is the immediate past chairwoman of the Bay County Economic Development Alliance.

“The globe is watching us,” she said.

In particular, a group of executives who currently work in a Riverside Avenue office in Jacksonville are watching closely. Many economic development officials in the Panama City area are hoping the new airport will make the region more accessible and open up new opportunities. But no one will benefit more than The St. Joe Co., the Jacksonville-based company that owns 71,000 acres immediately surrounding the airport and 300,000 acres within 40 miles of the site.

“This is really the future of our company,” said Rod Wilson, president of the West Bay Sector for St. Joe. West Bay is the name given to the land adjacent to the airport that St. Joe intends to develop.
The new airport is in a remote area of Bay County surrounded by largely undeveloped land. But St. Joe and area economic officials envision practically a new city sprouting from the airport.

“We are creating a new central business district for the region,” said Kevin Johnson, St. Joe’s vice president of economic development who was brought in last fall to market West Bay.

“We have a greenfield opportunity,” Johnson said, referring to the vast area that is basically wide open for new and planned development.

“Greenfield opportunities are an anomaly.

“This is a very tide-changing opportunity for the state of Florida.”

The opportunity is so important to St. Joe that after being headquartered in Jacksonville for three-quarters of a century, the company will move its offices to a new building in West Bay next year so it can monitor development of the region more closely.

“To me, it’s about moving the company where the shareholders’ assets are,” said St. Joe Chief Executive Officer Britt Greene.

A brief history

St. Joe was formed after the death of Alfred I. duPont in 1935 as a holding company for duPont’s vast business assets. The businesses included a paper mill in Port St. Joe, which gave the company its name, but the corporate office was located in Jacksonville, where duPont lived. His brother-in-law who ran St. Joe after duPont’s death, Ed Ball, also lived in Jacksonville.

St. Joe’s diverse holdings included about 1 million acres of Florida real estate, much of that timberland in the Panhandle that duPont and Ball accumulated at discount prices in the 1920s.

The trust established by duPont’s estate controlled most of St. Joe’s stock. But after more shares were distributed to the general public in the 1990s, St. Joe came under pressure to increase profits by exploiting the development potential of its land holdings, which included prime beachfront locations along the Gulf of Mexico. St. Joe sold off its industrial properties and transformed into a real estate development company, bringing in Walt Disney Co. real estate executive Peter Rummell as CEO in 1997 to lead the transformation.

Over the next decade, St. Joe began creating new communities on the land it owned. Its signature development was WaterColor, a 499-acre residential community in Walton County that includes a resort hotel called the WaterColor Inn.

As the housing market slowed in the past few years, St. Joe again shifted its focus. In 2007, it announced a restructuring in which it transferred much of the development and management responsibilities of its properties to strategic partners. For example, while it still owns the WaterColor Inn, the hotel is operated by a third-party management company.

Rummell retired in 2008 and was succeeded by Greene at a time when home sales at St. Joe’s communities were drying up. St. Joe reported net losses in 2008 and 2009, but company officials have been largely unconcerned about short-term results, turning their attention instead to the opportunities presented by the opening of the Panama City airport. And they are looking at opportunities far into the future.

“This is not a five-year deal for us. This is not a 10-year deal. This is a 50- to 75-year deal for us,” said Johnson.

High hopes for airport

The new airport is being built on 4,000 acres donated by St. Joe. Although it gave up the land free, the deal created a big business opportunity for St. Joe because of all the land it owns surrounding the airport. But St. Joe did not initiate the project.

The relocation of the existing Panama City airport began in the mid-1990s when the Airport Authority was considering ways to extend its runway to bring in larger jets. The current airport can accommodate only regional carriers, which limits the flights that go in and out of Panama City.

“We have just a few places you could go,” said Tannehill. But with the 10,000-foot runway at the new airport, “we can land the 747s in here.”
After determining there was no room at the current location to extend the runway, the airport authority approached St. Joe in 1998 about using some of its land to build a new airport.

As the project proceeded, it faced opposition from environmental groups that were concerned about the impact of the airport construction. And it also faced opposition from local residents who didn’t see the need for a new airport. In fact, Bay County residents rejected the airport in a nonbinding referendum in 2004 by a vote of 54 percent to 46 percent. But the business community embraced the airport and the project continued.

“Panama City’s historically been a tough place to get to,” said Wayne Stubbs, executive director of the Port of Panama City.

“We’re all going to benefit from the accessibility.”

After fending off several legal challenges from environmental groups, ground was broken for the airport in 2007.

Already, the airport, aided by St. Joe, secured a deal with Southwest Airlines to begin service May 23 with eight daily flights in and out of Panama City. St. Joe showed its interest in bringing more flights to Panama City by agreeing to reimburse Southwest for any losses during its first three years of operation at the airport.

“My guess is it’s not going to be a large number,” said Greene.

The St. Joe CEO said he sees the Southwest deal as a marketing investment to make sure more people visit Panama City and see what the region has to offer.

“Once they’re there, we know we can win them over,” he said.

St. Joe had originally targeted people in the Southeastern U.S. to buy property in its residential communities as vacation or retirement homes, because those people can drive to the Panhandle. But Greene said the

Southwest flights open the market to people in Chicago and Northeastern cities who can now get to Panama City more easily.

“We can connect to areas of the country that were inaccessible,” he said.
Plans for West Bay

St. Joe’s development of the West Bay Sector, the 71,000 acres it owns surrounding the airport, begins with a three-phase plan totaling 1,000 acres. The first phase consists of 100 acres on the road leading to the airport that will be used for office space plus potential retail uses, such as an airport hotel and restaurants.

So far, the only project that’s actually been announced for the site is the office building St. Joe will construct for its headquarters. But Johnson expects interest to pick up as the airport opens.

“We’re at a stage now where we can really see that this is happening. There’s no mystery to this event any longer,” he said.

The plan includes 600 acres immediately accessible to the airport runway that can accommodate aerospace businesses.

But Johnson said the company is not limiting the type of businesses that can move into West Bay.

“We define it as a place where you can create virtually any type of opportunity that fits into our model,” he said.

The Panhandle region is already an aerospace center with a navy base and six aviation-related military bases, and 1,900 aerospace and defense-related businesses, according to Florida’s Great Northwest, an economic development organization for the region. So bringing in more aerospace companies is a natural fit for the airport.

“The low-hanging fruit is the aerospace industry,” said Wilson of St. Joe.

But Al Wenstrand, president of Florida’s Great Northwest, expects to see the region open to businesses such as health services, medical technologies and logistics and distribution.

Wenstrand sees the potential to create a new metropolitan area on the now vacant land around the airport.

“It has the opportunity to be done correctly,” he said. “This is an opportunity I didn’t see anywhere else.”

Walters of the Economic Development Alliance said it’s up to the community to take advantage of the opportunity.

“We have to make a great first impression. We have to continually market ourselves,” she said.

“Shame on us if we don’t take advantage of that opportunity.”

‘Aerotropolis’ concept

The notion of a new “city” sprouting from the Panama City airport is not far-fetched, according to John Kasarda, director of the Kenan Institute of Private Enterprise at the University of North Carolina.

Kasarda has developed the concept of an “aerotropolis” to describe new development of business and entertainment venues within a 15-minute drive of an airport.

“The key to the aerotropolis is time-cost accessibility,” said Kasarda. “What the aerotropolis does is lay out a plan for intelligent growth.”

He sees the Panama City airport as “the ideal proof of concept” for his theory.

“It’s basically a blank canvas,” he said. “There are so few greenfield airports.”

Kasarda thinks St. Joe has done a good job with its plans for the airport area.

“The West Bay Sector plan is an excellent aerotropolis plan,” he said.

But St. Joe is not getting unanimous support. John Hedrick, chairman of the Panhandle Citizens Coalition, a group that opposed the airport, is concerned about the pace of development in the region.

“Short of no airport, probably having as little development as possible” is his hope for the region.

Hedrick’s group is now trying to drum up support for Amendment 4, the Florida ballot measure that would allow the public to vote on comprehensive land-use changes.

“We’re hoping to minimize [the airport's] impact and we hope that things like Amendment 4 will help us do that. The citizens did not want this in the first place,” he said, referring to the 2004 vote.

But Greene said St. Joe acts responsibly in developing its properties, including environmental concerns.

“We believe there’s inherent value in protecting the environment around development. All our projects are environmentally tuned to the land,” he said.

Greene points specifically to the West Bay plan, which sets aside 39,000 of St. Joe’s 71,000 acres to be preserved for nature.

“It’s very rare for a company to set aside 39,000 acres around a new airport for environmental protection. I think that’s extraordinary,” he said.

First Coast still in play

The West Bay Sector is St. Joe’s immediate concern, but it also owns the 300,000 acres within 40 miles of the airport and 577,000 acres in total. Much of that is unplanned for development right now.

“There are probably going to be a number of opportunities that we’re not even thinking about yet,” said Greene.

One project in the Jacksonville area that remains is the 4,170-acre RiverTown residential community in northern St. Johns County, where home sales have stopped because of the recession. But Greene is still optimistic about that project when the economy improves.

“RiverTown is still a viable project,” he said.

St. Joe also has a joint venture with Regency Centers Corp. to build a mixed-use development including a Publix supermarket in the San Marco area of Jacksonville, but that has also been put on hold by the recession.

“We’re just waiting for the market to get right with that,” he said.

But for the most part, St. Joe will be getting less visible in the Jacksonville area as it prepares to move its headquarters to Panama City. St. Joe has only about 50 employees at its Jacksonville headquarters and the Jacksonville-based duPont trust, which controlled St. Joe for decades, sold off its shares in the company several years ago.

Greene said St. Joe’s announcement last month that it would move its headquarters to West Bay was important for its marketing efforts in that region. It demonstrates the viability of the project to companies that are thinking of moving there, he said.

“It’s very hard to ask them to make the move early in the development if we’re not there too,” he said.

And with the focus of St. Joe’s operations on West Bay and other property in the Panhandle, it will be much easier for Greene and the rest of his team if they relocate to the region.

“We’ve been doing it from afar,” he said. “But it’s going to be a lot more difficult as the pace of development accelerates.”

Fannie, Freddy and FHA Ease Rules

Saturday, April 10th, 2010

WASHINGTON – April 9, 2010 – To help resuscitate Florida’s condo market, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) eased their lending rules. Freddie was last, with new guidelines effective April 1.

The FHA made changes first in November 2009. At the time, Peter Zalewski, a condo market analyst and broker with Condo Vultures in Bal Harbour, Fla., called it a “pretty significant move. … This might be an entree for traditional and conventional lenders to return to the marketplace.”

Among other things, FHA increased the number of project units it would finance from 30 percent to 50 percent; required that at least 50 percent of units were owner-occupied; and reduced a presale requirement for new construction to 30 percent.

In January, Fannie Mae eased its condo lending rules, proving Zalewski’s prediction was correct. The government-sponsored enterprise took a hands-on approach by empowering a Florida team to analyze each condo project and approve lending in those it considered to have a lower risk.

Effective April 1, Freddie Mac followed suit. Rather than create teams, however, Freddie Mac stated a list of new rules it would follow as the FHA did, with a prime focus on the buying of a condo in which the seller has a mortgage backed by Freddie Mac.

Those rules include:

• The mortgage file must contain documentation verifying that the existing first lien conventional mortgage on the unit being purchased is owned by Freddie Mac, in whole or in part, or securitized by Freddie Mac.
• The seller’s note date of the existing mortgage for the unit being purchased is on or before Dec. 31, 2009.
• The settlement date for the new mortgage is on or before March 31, 2011.

Freddie Mac issued a Bulletin explaining the changes. To download the Bulletin (PDF format) click here.

© 2010 Florida Realtors®

Airport Update

Wednesday, April 7th, 2010

PAT KELLY / News Herald Writer
WEST BAY — Lori Bates walks through the interior of the new airport terminal under construction near West Bay positively bubbling with excitement.

Although workers still bustle around the scaffolding and throw-cloths, Bates, the interior designer for the project, sees future floors, ticket counters, furniture, ceilings and wall coverings all reflecting the diversity of Northwest Florida.

With fewer than 50 days till a May 23 opening, construction on the main terminal building of the Northwest Florida Beaches International Airport is now about 92 percent complete, and as Bates maneuvers around the interior, a visitor can begin to see the finished product through her eyes.

A light beige terrazzo tile symbolizing sand is being installed inside the front entrance area to give it a “beachy” feel, she said. Within the beige flooring space, large swatches of blue-green “poured-out” tiling suggest waves at the beach.

“It gives us some color and excitement, some ‘pop,’ ” Bates said. Sunshine streams through spacious skylights overhead to highlight massive, navy blue glass-tiled columns that complement the “poured terrazzo” sections.

When visitors enter the completed 120,000-square-foot terminal, they will notice the new airport’s logo, still undergoing final design, high overhead facing the entrance doors and illuminated by the skylights.

Bates said she is particularly excited by a large 20-foot-square Audubon Society mural that will be located to the left of the entrance space, composed of photos submitted by society members.

“We think it will be breathtaking,” Bates said.

Members of the Bay County Veterans Council were at the terminal recently examining a special second-floor “veterans” room they will begin operating in June, where military men and women coming and going from the airport can sit and enjoy coffee, cookies and light snacks.

“Our motto is vets serving vets,” said James Doescher, who also serves as commander of Chapter 794 of the Military Order of the Purple Heart. “We want to serve our veterans, especially those in Iraq and Afghanistan.”

Bates said a hefty 40-foot by 21-foot mural honoring the area’s military heritage will go up on a nearby wall in the baggage-claim section, and vets will be able to view the mural through several large windows in their sector.

Bates said she is hopeful one of the furniture companies supplying the new airport will donate furniture for the vets’ room. The Airport Authority board also recently indicated its support for the project.

Light pours through multiple skylights along the length of the upstairs concourse, and six sizeable 17-foot by 15-foot murals of local photos are planned for that locale, Bates said.

The photos are all “real works of art,” said Carolyne Danzey, an interior design intern with Bates’ company, Lori Bates Interiors.

“We wanted to show the real diversity of the area,” said Danzey, who holds a degree in interior design from the University of Alabama.

The photos depict scenes from Northwest Florida counties such as Bay, Walton and Franklin that highlight recreational, educational and business opportunities in the region.

“It’s been quite a community effort to come up with the right photos,” Bates said. “I think they represent the entire area.”

Back on the ground floor, Bates moves her hand over the front surfaces of the new ticket counters almost ready for installation. The surfaces feature patterns of Capri shell slices that Bates called “a see-through version of mother of pearl.”

A fine metal mesh — much like a fireplace screen — is planned for the overhead space to give the illusion of a fishnet weave, she said, adding to the coastal feel of the airport.

Much of the ceiling material inside the terminal has the appearance of maple wood planks that are actually metal with a vinyl covering, creating a feeling of warmth and charm, she said.

The restaurants and retail shops in the facility will have “beach hut” features that will contribute to the natural coastal theme, Bates said. There will be separate restaurants both upstairs and downstairs.

Several artists have “generously donated their work” to be displayed in the terminal, Bates said, including Justin Gaffrey and Guy Harvey. The pieces will join an existing collection already owned by the airport.

Careful thought also has been given to seating in the terminal waiting areas, with large S-shaped furniture featured in the ground-floor, non-secure spaces, allowing family members and friends to wait for passengers without feeling they are staring at each other.

“It’s a very contemporary look,” Bates said.

Freddie Mac To Waive Rules

Thursday, April 1st, 2010

MIAMI (AP) – April 1, 2010 – Freddie Mac is moving to buoy the battered Florida condo market, waiving lending rules that made it harder to buy and sell units in many condo buildings.

Freddie Mac said Wednesday it will back mortgages on units in financially troubled condo developments as long as the seller’s loan is already owned or securitized by the mortgage finance company.

The announcement is a reversal by Freddie Mac, which had been rejecting mortgages for units in condo developments with low occupancy and high delinquency rates for condo association fees.

The change, intended to increase financing availability for Florida condos, is effective April 1. To qualify, the closing date for the new mortgage must be on or before March 31, 2011.

Florida’s once-burgeoning condo market has been hit hard by foreclosures, falling prices and high inventory caused by overbuilding. Condo prices have fallen by half since 2006 in many parts of the state.

Condo associations with a glut of empty units have struggled to collect fees, causing buildings to fall into disrepair and forcing associations to delay improvements.

The condo market woes led Freddie Mac to implement rules governing mortgages in troubled buildings. Units in condo developments where more than 15 percent of owners were delinquent on their association fees could not get Freddie Mac financing. Also, Freddie Mac would not guarantee mortgages in developments unless at least 70 percent of the units were occupied.

The rules were meant to ensure that a building was in good shape and there were enough owners to pay for maintenance and preserve the value of the property.

But those same rules led to complaints from buyers as well as condo associations and developers, who saw them as obstacles to getting empty units sold and occupied.

Developers may now have an easier time selling units.

“Without a doubt, the condo developers that already have Freddie Mac loans in their buildings will be dancing a jig tonight because its the best news they can get,” said Jack McCabe, president of McCabe Research & Consulting, a real estate research firm based in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.

Freddie Mac’s sibling company Fannie Mae announced a separate plan for Florida condos earlier this year.

Fannie Mae is reviewing hundreds of condo projects in the state that currently don’t qualify for its loans. Buildings deemed stable after the review will be given a special approval.

If projects receive special approval, lenders will be allowed to offer mortgages to homebuyers and sell those loans to Fannie Mae, which pools them into bonds and sells them to investors.

Copyright © 2010 The Associated Press, Adrian Sainz, AP real estate writer.

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