| Permit
Reports
Metro New-Home
Construction Slows in April
Metropolitan Kansas
City single-family home construction
permit activity in April posted
its largest decline since February
2001 with a 26 percent drop from
the same time last year, according
to statistics compiled by the Home
Builders Association of Greater
Kansas City (HBA). Local municipalities
issued 861 permits in April, down
from the 1,168 permits issued during
the previous April, which was a
record for the month. The total
was also 10 percent off the previous
five-year average for the month
of April. |
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|
April
Permit Reports |
| Residential
Building Permit Statistics
- Excel
| PDF
Single-family
Detached Residential Building
Permits Report - Excel
| PDF
Permit information
is compiled by the Home Builders
Association
of Greater Kansas City. |
|
Despite the slowdown last
month, single-family new-home construction
in the metro area is off just 4 percent
from the record pace established in 2004,
making the first four months of this year
the second-busiest on record for new-home
construction. A total of 3,559 single-family
permits have been issued so far this year,
down from 3,719 at the same point in 2004.
With forecasts calling for
low mortgage rates and stronger local
economic growth, the outlook for residential
construction in the metro remains very
optimistic despite the slowdown in April,
according to HBA Executive Vice President
Tim Underwood.
“New-home sales remain
strong and ahead of last year’s
record pace, putting the area on track
for another positive year for housing,”
Underwood. “The one concern facing
local home builders is a rise in new-home
inventory, with new-home listings up 28
percent compared to the same time last
year. I believe many builders would like
to decrease speculative inventory before
moving forward and want to make sure they
are continuing to build the right products
at the right prices in the right locations.”
Only three of the top 10
municipalities in single-family permit
totals have posted an increase in activity
in 2005: Kansas City, Mo., is up 34 percent,
followed by Raymore up 13 percent and
Lenexa up 4 percent.
Overland Park has posted the largest decline,
down 50 percent, as a slowdown in the
plan review process, less developed land
with sewers and a lack of home sites in
price ranges demanded by new-home buyers
has curtailed activity. Johnson County
permits are down 20 percent accompanied
by a 10 percent rise in the average new-home
sales price to more than $325,000. The
county’s market share has slipped
from 34 percent at this time last year
to 28 percent in 2005. Clay County has
moved into second place with a 21 percent
share, followed by Jackson County with
a 20 percent share of the new-home construction
market.
Kansas City, Mo.,
ranked as the top city for new single-family
construction permits through April with
736 permits, followed by Olathe with 328
permits. Lee’s Summit ranked third
with 261 followed by Overland Park with
168 permits. Rounding out the top 10 were,
Raymore, 163 permits; Shawnee, 153; Kansas
City, Kan./Wyandotte County, 143; Independence,
136; Gardner, 129; and Lenexa, 98.
The
Home Builders Association of Greater Kansas
City (HBA) is the voice of the housing
industry and the source for housing information.
Comprising more than 1,000 member companies,
the HBA represents an industry that contributes
more than $2.5 billion to the Kansas City
economy and supports more than 36,000
jobs in the Greater Kansas City metropolitan
area. |