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Sinking housing market maroons homeowners

Abandoned projects have many new buyers staring at unfinished business

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Image: Todd Zaki Warfel stands in front of broken and boarded up windows in an unoccupied unit.
  Sinking housing market maroons homeowners
Abandoned projects have many new buyers staring at unfinished business

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updated 6:47 p.m. ET April 14, 2008

EGG HARBOR TOWNSHIP, N.J. - At the new community of Seapine Estates, street names like Sea Foam Drive and Shoreline Road are meant to evoke a feeling of coastal tranquility. Instead, the two dozen or so residents of this New Jersey Shore development, near Atlantic City, feel anything but peace. The Pennsylvania builder went bankrupt last summer and halted work, leaving open foundations, unfinished homes and empty streets that have invited outsiders to dump trash, spray graffiti and race cars.

As America’s housing market has foundered, homeowners who bought into newly rising projects at just the wrong time have found themselves marooned in stalled, abandoned or largely unoccupied developments with little place to turn, placing a strain on them and municipalities forced to pick up the pieces.

Experts say it’s one of the least examined aspects of the housing downturn, and one that has struck many parts of the country, from areas like Las Vegas, which experienced rampant speculation and overbuilding, to cities where construction was more restrained such as the Jersey Shore and Philadelphia.

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The housing market remains in the doldrums: All but one of 20 metropolitan areas showed home price declines in January from a year ago, down 10.7 percent overall, according to the latest figures from the widely watched Standard & Poor’s/Case-Shiller home price index. Sixteen of the 20 metro areas posted record lows, with Las Vegas and Miami tying for the weakest market. Only Charlotte, N.C., bucked the trend, eking out an almost 2 percent gain.

Ken Bachman, 37, who lives on a half-empty street in Seapine, feels trapped. When he leaves the house every day, he has to look at an unsightly, unfinished home across the street. Bankrupt Elliott Building Group of Langhorne, Pa., had planned more than 200 houses in the development with prices starting around $300,000, but residents say the community is only about a fifth occupied.

“It’s an undesirable place to live right now,” Bachman said. “Homes have been on the market for sale in here for over a year and they’re just not selling, because who wants to move into a development that’s bankrupt?”

One third of over 200 cities surveyed have seen an increase in abandoned or vacant properties in their communities as well as other forms of blight, according to a report released last month by the National League of Cities in Washington.

Nearly 60 percent said lenders have not offered to help cities deal with the fallout from foreclosures and other problems in housing.

“In more cases, cities are picking up the slack by maintaining the homes, mowing the lawns and making sure that neighborhoods with abandoned housing are safe,” said Christiana McFarland, research manager at the league’s Center for Policy and Research. “It’s a strain on resources.”

More than 25,000 vacant and abandoned properties cost eight Ohio cities at least $63 million, as local governments deal with job losses and the foreclosure crisis, according to a February report commissioned by ReBuild Ohio, a coalition of local government, nonprofit and civic groups.

At the unfinished Seapine Estates, Denise and Kevin Urtubey, parents of a toddler, worry about the safety of their daughter. Cars have raced down the street in the middle of the night; a couple was found having sex toward the back of the development; tubs and other debris have been dumped in empty lots.

“It wouldn’t have happened if the neighborhood’s completed. It’s not a dead-end street. It’s just that nobody’s back there,” said Denise Urtubey, 27.

Like abandoned and foreclosed homes, unfinished houses and projects are not merely community nuisances. They also contribute to the glut of inventory dragging down the market.


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