Stephen J. Vertin MAI
Senior Member
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2002
- Professional Status
- Certified General Appraiser
- State
- Illinois
Tim: I get it I really do. However, if you really think of it, we are limited in a 50-year time frame. Why? Because the only source outside of preforming extraction is Marshall's when estimating economic-life. While I believe there may be a handful of properties in the 55-60 year category I do not recall higher.
But that is Ok, because it serves as a rating gauge... an anchor. With substantial limitations I use to come up with these crazy ages outside the box of referenced support. Whether for good or bad it seems Marshall's has clout. So to say a 100-year old building cannot have a 50-year economic life is unrealistic and given sources simply unsupportable. Further saying a 100-year old building cannot have a 15-year effective age is equally unsupportable. You really only have a range of 0 to 50-years on either side. Unless you want to forge out extraction in every report.
I guess you could use exaction but how that works out for others as far as productivity is another question. Most appraisal preformed in Chicago's commercial arenas have sales and income. Cost are dead. Most clients still require effective age and economic life. I have never heard a client say don't use Marshall's. Have you? It has been around longer than all of us.
With that said, the disagreements in age/life are substantial and always have been. Why? Most text are clear as mud on the matter. So I am not sure disagreeing with each other on a rating system is anything new. However, if one were used it seems a simple model everyone could understand. While you could disagree on the rating it would be hard to disagree with how in functions. As stated appraisers disagree with age/life ratings and how the model functions currently so it is sort of a double disagreement whammy.
But that is Ok, because it serves as a rating gauge... an anchor. With substantial limitations I use to come up with these crazy ages outside the box of referenced support. Whether for good or bad it seems Marshall's has clout. So to say a 100-year old building cannot have a 50-year economic life is unrealistic and given sources simply unsupportable. Further saying a 100-year old building cannot have a 15-year effective age is equally unsupportable. You really only have a range of 0 to 50-years on either side. Unless you want to forge out extraction in every report.
I guess you could use exaction but how that works out for others as far as productivity is another question. Most appraisal preformed in Chicago's commercial arenas have sales and income. Cost are dead. Most clients still require effective age and economic life. I have never heard a client say don't use Marshall's. Have you? It has been around longer than all of us.
With that said, the disagreements in age/life are substantial and always have been. Why? Most text are clear as mud on the matter. So I am not sure disagreeing with each other on a rating system is anything new. However, if one were used it seems a simple model everyone could understand. While you could disagree on the rating it would be hard to disagree with how in functions. As stated appraisers disagree with age/life ratings and how the model functions currently so it is sort of a double disagreement whammy.