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Home builders don’t expect return of boom, but can foresee ‘average’ market

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From 2009 to 2011, new home activity “bounced along the bottom,” showing little signs of fluctuation from 2009, Denk said.

Since late 2011, the industry’s prospects have brightened.

Data supplied by local municipal building departments indicate the Tri-Cities combined to issue 37 permits for the construction of new single-family homes from January 2012 to November.

That compared to 21 permits issued for the same period in 2011, an increase of 76 percent.

Hall, who builds homes in the Tri-Cities, Elgin and other nearby communities, said his company built five homes in 2012 and began to find work building homes in developing neighborhoods that had lain dormant for years.

“Toward the end of the third quarter, and beginning of the fourth quarter [in 2012], we started seeing a little more action,” Hall said. “And some of it is coming in areas that have been dead for a long time.”

The local data and observations correspond to a trend seen nationally, Denk said. He said national building permit data showed home-building activity increased in 2012 to 41 percent of the 2000 to 2003 national average.

“Things have been getting better,” Denk said.

Illinois has lagged behind the national average; the state in 2012 added only about 15 percent of the new homes that were built annually, on average, from 2000 to 2003.

Denk said the NAHB believes home-building activity will increase nationally and in the Chicago area in 2013.

The NAHB forecasts new home construction activity to increase in Illinois to 30 percent of the 2000 to 2003 average in 2013, and to 50 percent of that average in 2014.

He credited the recent uptick to improvements in the housing market. Firmer housing prices – not aided by tax deductions or other government subsidies – and more sales of existing homes have prompted those who were waiting to build to act.

“The changes in the market have enabled people to come off the sidelines, with the expectation now being that the most expensive thing they will ever build or buy will be worth the same or more, not less, in six to 12 months,” Denk said.


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