Joe Flacco
Elite Member
- Joined
- Jul 31, 2013
- Professional Status
- Certified Residential Appraiser
- State
- Maryland
Most of the site work contracts I see for land without public utilities available is around $150k.
Sometimes extraction is the best option available. A big chunk of DC is historic district and 100+ year old rowhouse neighborhoods. Obviously if you have site sales they are the best. Then vacant land sales adjusted for developing to the land to a site is second best. But after that extraction using depreciated homes is the best. Properties acquired by developers for renovation.
The problem is that depreciation involves what developers are willing to actually pay for a lot at any given point in time. - Because you have to figure in entrepreneurial profit and such things. You simply can't get that without lot sales. And even then, you need to study the market to make sure that the developers assumptions still hold up. How good is extraction otherwise? Well, heck, you just don't know! Well, you say it means something. I say you are just as well off guessing.
Site value is not always the value of the land at which new construction is feasible. By that logic it would never be not feasible to build. You may see depreciation factored into vacant land sale prices if market conditions are that way. When the market conditions are that way it is probably better to consider both land sales and extraction methods to see if it makes sense. George and I had a lengthy debate about this.
Anyway, I agree with you that extraction method by itself is less than ideal but sometimes it's the best option available.
When you say there is construction that is not feasible, you mean there are cases where there is no entrepreneurial profit. I would say, that if that is the case, there are people who work for nothing. Common sense dictates otherwise. The problem is in such construction, say where a farm builds a barn on a vacant lot of land so he has, say, some extra place to store his hay that is closer to the cows, there is a value to that and there is entrepreneurial profit hidden in his activities. Since there is no sale, it's hard to say what that barn was worth to the farmer (it was we must assume the cost of materials + some amount). So if you had to value this and wanted to use the Extraction Method and only looked at the cost of construction without profit minus depreciation, you land value would be off because you are not able to calculate the entrepreneurial incentive/profit + architectural costs hidden in the farmers activities.
We can argue about this at length. But in reality, it depends on location. My experience here is that what developers actually pay for lots is often surprisingly low in comparison to sale prices and the fact that there are so few lots available for sale. It certainly depends on where the housing market is. But developers, in buying land, have all kinds of risks to contend with 1+ year down the road. They factor in that risk big time. So, in this area, based on my experience, your extraction method is useless.