From the New York website: A
laundry list of luxury amenities isn’t just for South Florida’s new
construction towers. College students are also getting the hotel suite
treatment.
Stainless steel
appliances, hardwood floors, en suite bathrooms and in-unit washer/dryers are fast becoming standard at large public universities across the
country, according CNBC.
Developers are
investing in privately owned student housing and upping the ante on amenities, resulting in approximately
47,700 new beds in the pipeling for this fall semester. Universities in the
Southeast are the primary target, according to Axiometrics, an apartment
research firm.
“Privately owned
student housing is quickly becoming an integral sector in real estate, and
performance metrics demonstrate its strength,” Jay Denton, senior vice
president of analytics at the firm, told CNBC. “Axiometrics forecasts rent
growth to remain strong over the next five years and occupancy to stay above 95
percent, as enrollment continues to rise nationwide.”
As enrollment strengthens
at state universities, housing has become increasingly scarce.
“The interest really
started two or three years ago. A lot of the capital — institutional investors
— needed to be educated on the space itself and what it meant to be in student
housing. We had to do a lot of convincing that it wasn’t all ‘Animal House’
structures, but actually really stable cash flow properties,” J.J. Smith, chief
operating officer of CA Student Living, told CNBC. “Now that we have educated
the institutional world, we’re seeing a lot of capital interested in these
properties.”[CNBC] –Christopher Cameron
Original Content The
Real Deal
No comments:
Post a Comment