Archive for the ‘555YVR In The News’ Category

555YVR Wins San Francisco Business Times’ Deals of the Year for Best Market-Rate Residential (Outside San Francisco)

Tuesday, March 30th, 2010

Walnut Creek embraces urban multi-unit style
San Francisco Business Times (March 26-April 1, 2010) – by Blanca Torres
Walnut Creek is a suburban city undergoing an urban make-over, and condo development 555YVR is yet another sign of the change.

With its a sleek, modern look and short distance from public transportation, the 87-unit project is proving that high-density living can work in cities dominated by single-family homes.

“There is a certain buyer that really wants the lock-and-go lifestyle instead of the obligations that go with a single-family home,” said Bruce Dorfman, principal of Thompson Dorfman Partners, the firm that developed 555YVR.

The project came online in summer 2009, during one of the worst markets for residential real estate, but has managed to sell close to 40 percent of its units in six months. Prices range from $300,000s to mid-$700,000s for one and two-bedrooms that measure 760 to 1,280 square feet.

Those prices are down about 20 percent from what the developer projected when the development was planned prior to the financial meltdown.

“We’re very happy with how this project is positioned and we’re happy with the sales,” Dorfman said. “We’ve had to adjust our expectations.”

The building offers features such as a gym, floor-to-ceiling windows, high-end finishes and appliances, 9- to 10-foot ceilings plus the “sky lounge,” a rooftop terrace with an outdoor kitchen, fireplace and views of Mt. Diablo.

“Do you want to be driving a long way into the city because you don’t have BART access or do you want be on our sky lounge after work?” Dorfman said.

555YVR was the only major condo building to hit the Walnut Creek market in the last year and is giving buyers options that are hard to come by in the Interstate 680 corridor.

Besides offering condos, 555YVR includes five live-work units. A yoga instructor was the first user to put one into escrow.

Thompson Dorfman began focusing on building projects near transit in the mid-1990s at a time when city planning departments and some buyers were skeptical about the urban living experience, Dorfman said. Now the reverse is true.

“High-density is something we encourage in our downtown and close to the BART,” said Jeremy Lochiro, a senior planner with Walnut Creek. “Walnut Creek is primarily an in-fill community. We are looking for redevelopment opportunities that would provide a mix of housing and retail and office space.”

One of the challenges of developing a transit-oriented project is assembling a site, Dorfman said, and offering more than just proximity to transit. 555YVR is within a mile of dozens of amenities such as shopping, restaurants, a movie theater and the Lesher Center for the Performing Arts.

The city’s chic shopping district has a regional draw with Broadway Plaza, a Nordstrom and Macy’s-anchored outdoor shopping mall, which will welcome the East Bay’s first Neiman Marcus department store in 2012.

“At the end of the day, we’re glad we developed the project that was close to BART and is surrounded by all the retail and downtown Walnut Creek,” Dorfman said. “If it was far in
555YVR

Location: 555 Ygnacio Valley Road, Walnut Creek.
Size: 87 units, 90,000 square feet.
Cost: $45 million.
Developer: Thompson Dorfman Partners LLC.
Architect: Kwan Henmi and KTGY Group.
Contractor: Palisades Builders.
Engineers: Ellis Mason and Associates, FBA and BKF.
Financial partners: Cornerstone Real Estate Advisors

Bruce Dorfman talks about the comfort of living near transit

Monday, March 1st, 2010

Bay Area cities chase billions for transit sites

More Bay Area cities are looking to position potential development sites near transit to compete for billions of funding and attract developers.

In the last three years, more than 60 cities in the nine-county region have applied to have a transportation node in their city designated as a “priority development area.” That status makes it easier for cities secure funding for future transit-oriented residential projects.

The Association of Bay Area Governments and the Metropolitan Transportation Commission are the lead agencies that operate the development area program and have granted the status to 100 sites so far.

The number continues to climb. Oakland is in the process of adding six priority development areas, mostly around BART stations. Fremont is pursuing the status for the land around the Warm Springs BART station, which started construction last fall.

“It’s a robust program that is providing a foundation for sustainable communities,” said Miriam Chion, principal planner for ABAG.

The program was created out of an initiative called FOCUS, that is a partnership between ABAG, MTC, the Bay Area Air Quality Management District and the San Francisco Bay Conservation and Development Commission with a goal of encouraging more efficient and environmentally-friendly development.

Funding is available from numerous sources including the MTC, which has set aside $2.2 billion through 2035 for infrastructure work, improving transit access and land-banking for in-fill development in the Bay Area. The commission is accepting proposals for the first $40 million allocation of that program.

Cities can also apply grants from a pool of more than $10 million MTC has also set aside to pay for site planning and development costs. That program has already awarded 25 of those grants totalling $13.1 million.

Avalon Bay, a major builder of market-rate apartments, has built a few projects in priority development areas, including one completed last year in Union City and another in Dublin. Both are near BART stations.

“There are a tremendous number of obstacles to developing anything in the Bay Area,” said Jeff White, senior development director for Avalon Bay. “To the extent you can lower the barriers to entry, it will make whatever kind of development you are trying to do occur.”

Avalon Bay is building 422 units at Contra Costa Centre in Walnut Creek, a priority development area, where most of the site planning, including $59.5 million of infrastructure work, was already in place creating a “plug and play” situation for the developer.

“Without that investment, our project would not be financially feasible,” White said.

Thompson Dorfman Partners, a Mill Valley-based development firm, has completed more than a dozen projects near transit in the last 10 years including 555 YVR, an 87-unit project near the Walnut Creek BART station that came online last summer. The firm plans to pursue more transit-oriented projects in priority development areas.

Bruce Dorfman, a principal with the firm, said cities and potential residents have become more accepting of higher density residential projects.

“At first, living near transit was considered a nuisance,” Dorfman said. “Now, people say, ‘Isn’t it wonderful?’ Living in an urban core, you can walk out to the stores and the restaurants. Years ago, we got a push back on that.”

Besides lifestyle, putting more people closer to transit and job centers is also a necessity. ABAG estimates that the priority development areas take up about 3 percent of the total land available for development in the Bay Area. That percentage could increase if more sites are added.

Chion, the ABAG planner, said that small fraction of land could accommodate that more than half of the region’s projected population growth by 2035.

Priorities
Bay Area priority development areas:
Contra Costa: 28.
Alameda: 27.
San Mateo: 15.
Santa Clara: 11.
San Francisco: 10.
Solano: 9.
Sonoma: 9.
Marin: 3.
Napa: None.
Total: 112
Source: Association of Bay Area Governments.

San Francisco Business Times: Boutique condo project 555YVR makes 30th sale

Friday, January 15th, 2010

San Francisco Business Times – by J.K. Dineen

Boutique condo project 555YVR makes 30th sale

Thompson-Dorfman Partners 555YVR has logged its 30th sale in Walnut Creek. The project is attracting about half BART commuters — mostly workers from San Francisco, Oakland and Fremont — and about half current Walnut Creek residents.

The price per square foot has averaged $466. The project, the only new condo project in the I-680 corridor to open in 2009, is next to the BART station at 555 Ygnacio Valley Road. Prices range from $300,000s to mid-$700,000s. Residents began moving in a few months ago.

“Downtown Walnut Creek is a highly desirable neighborhood in which to live, work and play,” said Bruce Dorfman, principal of Thompson-Dorfman Partners “The future arrival of Neiman-Marcus is yet another signal of the area’s cachet, something not lost on our buyers.”

This month, 555YVR will begin to offer FHA loans, enabling buyers to apply a down payment as low as 3.5 percent, which could help demand in a market with no other new condominiums under construction.