San Diego Building more Housing than Last Year
Increases were largely led by new apartment buildings in downtown and University City. In the first nine months, 5,738 multifamily permits were pulled, an increase of more than 70 percent from the same time last year. Townhouses and condos are included in multifamily numbers but make up a much smaller portion of the market.
Single-family housing permits were also up, but not by much. There were 2,781 permits pulled, about 3 percent more than the same time last year.
Overall, the numbers reflect a period of intense apartment building because of rising rents.
It is possible that San Diego County could still end up building less housing in 2018. Rising steel prices and labor shortages have been cited by developers as reasons to hold off on new projects.
Also, even if the county builds more housing in 2018 than previous years, it still falls short of what experts say it needs to build based on population growth and the needs for workers in the strong economy.
The lack of new single-family homes experienced this year could be worse at the end of 2018 and into 2019 because of a slowdown in the housing market. So far this year, Trulia Research said San Diego had the most reductions — 20.5 percent — of the 100 biggest metro areas in the United States.
For contrast, there were 17,306 new homes built in San Diego County in 2004 and 15,258 in 2005. Following the housing boom years, building drastically reduced. During the Great Recession, in 2009, fewer than 3,000 homes were built.
Even as political pressure for more housing increased locally and at the state level in the last three years, San Diego County has been building less than 10,000 homes. There were 9,975 new homes constructed in 2015, 9,972 in 2016 and 9,580 in 2017.
Most forecasts predict an increase in new homes in California in 2019. The California Association of Realtors predicts an 8 percent increase in new home construction.
Source: SDuniontribune by Phillip Molnar