Mixed-Use Developments Get Regulatory Break From F.H.A. - NYTimes.com
4/5/13 3:02 PM
November 27, 2012
Regulatory Break for Mixed-Use Projects By JOE GOSE
When the real estate investment manager Jamestown Properties began renovating a massive old Sears warehouse in Atlanta last year, it had a good idea of what it wanted to create: a bustling urban hub with 440,000 square feet of offices, 330,000 square feet of shops and 259 residential units. The composition of the residential piece, however, remained a question. Would it be all rentals or a mix of condominiums and rentals? If a mix, what blend would perform best in a sluggish housing market characterized by scarce mortgage financing for condo buyers? Now, thanks to a recent Federal Housing Administration rule change aimed at supporting mixeduse properties, condos are getting more serious consideration in the $200 million development, known as Ponce City Market. “We continue to assess the right mix of what those units should be,” said Katharine Kelley, director of Jamestown’s development and construction division. “But the new F.H.A. ruling strengthens the attractiveness of condos as an option, because it increases the field of potential condo buyers.” Enacted in September, the rule change opens the door to government-insured mortgages for condos in mixed-use buildings with commercial footprints of up to 35 percent, up from the previous 25 percent limit. Exceptions may be granted for projects in which as much as half of the space is commercial. Developers hope this, along with other F.H.A. changes, will help revive condo sales just as the overall housing market is improving. The F.H.A., created in 1934, insures mortgages and offers programs that focus largely on first-time home buyers. Its support allows lenders to offer favorable mortgage terms, with down payments as low as 3.5 percent. Because the agency and the government-sponsored entities Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac now back 95 percent of residential mortgages — roughly double their share before the financial crisis — certification from one of them is considered critical to the success of residential developments. That is the case even though Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac are in conservatorship and an http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/28/realestate/commercial/mixed-u…=all&adxnnlx=1365192140-aSyHGGnywaocKCL1vUsTmA&pagewanted=print
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