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Scottsdale AZ Urban Living
Scottsdale Waterfront Homes
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Liquid urban-living style a contender
Waterfront property in the
Valley used to be a punch line - the thing we were all going
to get when The Big One struck and California fell into the
sea.
But with the advent of the urban-living trend, real-estate
buyers with the desire and the cash can make the punch line a
reality and live the luxe life on the water.
On the banks of the canal
The star of the waterfront living trend, the Scottsdale
Waterfront project, barely has any waterfront to speak of -
but customers still can't resist. Situated on the southwest
corner of Scottsdale and Camelback roads, this two-building
condominium complex will overlook the canal that runs past
the intersection. Part of the construction plans includes
beautifying the canal banks for Scottsdale Waterfront
residents and the general public.
"We consider the canal bank an amenity - a great amenity
that's never been used," says Geoffrey Edmunds, president of
Geoffrey Edmunds and Associates, a joint-venture partner in
the project with Opus West. "The entire canal bank will be
landscaped, and it will provide open space and walking areas
for the residents and people who live in the city of
Scottsdale."
When complete (sometime in 2007), the Scottsdale Waterfront
will comprise 198 condominiums ranging in price from
approximately $500,000 to $3.5 million. Square footage
starts around 1,200 square feet for condos on the lower
floors, while the 13th floor penthouses occupy almost 5,000
square feet each. More than 90 percent of the properties
sold in the first eight months they were on the market.
One couple already waiting to move into their Scottsdale
Waterfront condo is Harvey and Fran Friedman of Phoenix. The
Friedmans moved here from Cleveland more than 25 years ago
and have owned homes in Scottsdale and Paradise Valley.
Three years ago, they moved into Esplanade Place, the
granddaddy of Valley urban-living projects, located at
Camelback Road and 24th Street in Phoenix. Esplanade Place
is also an Edmunds project, and through the grapevine, the
couple heard about the new development long before
construction started.
"We got involved with (the Scottsdale Waterfront) when it
was still in the early stages," explains Harvey Friedman.
"There had been a lot of discussion about it for years and
years, and it piqued our interest.
"
More than the waterfront aspect, the Friedmans were
attracted to the location of the project, which is right
near Scottsdale Fashion Square and the Fifth Avenue and Old
Town areas.
"The location is excellent," Harvey Friedman says. "You've
got all you need to do, and a lot of it's within walking
distance, which is what we really enjoy." The Friedmans
expect to move in around April 2007.
Lakeside living
Buyers who want a little more water in their waterfront are
snapping up space in urban-living projects on Tempe Town
Lake in north Tempe. The perimeter of the manmade body of
water is filling up fast with condos, the first of which was
Edgewater at Hayden Ferry Lakeside, created by SunCor
Development Co.
Buyers will soon start moving into Edgewater's 40 units,
which sell for $390,000 to $2.15 million and range in size
from approximately 1,100 to 3,100 square feet. SunCor broke
ground last month on Bridgeview, the second of the four
planned Hayden Ferry Lakeside condo towers. Bridge-view has
a large percentage of its 104 units still available. Prices
start in the low $400,000 range and run up to around $5.5
million; square footage ranges from 1,100 to 5,000 square
feet.
On the other side of the lake and closer to Rural Road is
Northshore Condominiums, a WestStone Communities
urban-living project that broke ground in December 2005.
The 134 units are 95 percent sold out, which doesn't
surprise Marilyn Pfaff, WestStone marketing director. She
says that the lakefront location was a factor in "100
percent" of sales.
"So many people are attracted by what's going on around the
lake," she says. "They don't want to be one of those people
who drive by in five years and wish they would have bought.
They got in now, and they're smart."
Northshore, when complete, will be built in a U-shape around
a central courtyard with pools and fountains. The "U" will
face the lake, allowing for the maximum number of lakefront
views. Other units will overlook Arizona State University's
Karsten Golf Course across Rural Road. All but two units are
equipped with outdoor fireplaces on the balconies, "so you
can sit out on your balcony with a glass of wine and look
out over the lake," Pfaff says.
Other upcoming Tempe Town Lake urban-living projects include
the Regatta Pointe Condominiums on Rio Salado Parkway, one
section of which will offer lake views, and the Mondrian @
Tempe Town Lake apartments.
WestStone is also planning another condo tower next to
Northshore, a high-rise with 190 units and a sky lounge,
which should break ground in the fourth quarter of 2006.
"It's all about the location," Pfaff says of the lakefront
building boom. "It's all about trying to be close to
whatever lake we have in the desert. So much is happening
around that lake, and I know that all of the great property
seems to be spoken for. There's big plans for it all."
Buyers and sellers
Water or no water, the people buying into lakefront urban
living are generally the same customers purchasing in
similar landlocked projects.
"One is the investor, two is the empty-nester and three is a
bachelor or a young executive," says Evan Katz, a member of
the Katz Group of Realty Executives.
Edmunds says, "The most important single ingredient is the
change in lifestyle for people." The bulk of future
Scotts-dale Waterfront residents are "people between the
ages of 50 and 70 who are looking for a new lifestyle that
allows them to lock and leave, and not have to maintain a
large single-family home on a large lot. So we get a lot of
buyers from North Scottsdale and Paradise Valley who are
moving out of their single-family home and moving into the
urban lifestyle."
That description fits the Friedmans perfectly. "We bought a
condo in California a few years ago, and we decided we liked
that kind of living," Fran Friedman says. "It was easy
because we travel a lot; we just lock the door and go."
In other urban-living communities such as Northshore, the
main buyer is the young professional, a fact that may
partially be attributed to the lower price points.
The young professionals "really love Tempe and the lake and
the lifestyle," Pfaff says. "It's a great mix - you've got
what's going on in Tempe, and you're close to Scottsdale."
The best news for waterfront property owners may come when
it's time to sell, Katz says.
"I think the waterfront environment - that feeling of being
on the water - is a very unique thing here in the Valley. I
think in the long term the waterfront properties, the ones
facing the water, will probably resell better than others.
You can compare it to a golf-course lot; anything that is
unique always will deliver a premium, especially on resale."
That may be, but the Friedmans aren't looking to sell their
waterfront property any time soon.
"We're a good year, 14 months away from moving in, and the
excitement and anticipation starts to grow as it gets closer
and closer," Harvey Friedman says. And after moving day
finally arrives, "We're going to be there for a while."
For her part, Fran is looking forward to decorating the new
place.
"That's the best part," she says.
Source:
Jewish New
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The
Fair Housing Act
prohibits discrimination in housing based on color,
race, religion, national origin, sex, familial status,
or disability. Copyright © 2004 (ARMLS)
Arizona Regional Multiple Listing Service, Inc.
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