Rex,Until he does a H&BU analysis and checks to see if Residential is an allowed use etc, its only zoned commercial, not necessarily commercial land.
As I posted already, the only way to figure that out is by doing commercial appraising. You are going to need to look at the as-vacant value of the site and that means commercial comps. You are going to have to looked at the as improved commercial value and that is commercial appraising possibly even income capitalization.
I am not sure how res guys would know that with this type of problem, it is not sequential: HBU first, valuation next. It is the series of valuations in the different premises that will tell you both the market value and the HBU. In case, that's too abstract - you won't know it is worth $80/sf in residential use and $100 square foot in commercial use, until you do a commercial appraisal. I don't think any general appraisers will see it differently.
As to practical experience, I never did one of these where the res use was the higher value. I suppose there is such a thing as residential sprawl, I have just never seen the residential uses crowding out the commercial ones. It certainly doesn't conform to any of the classical land use models.
I didn't say it was simple. I said that was "square one" - and if you can't get passed that... As a general appraiser, I don't have need to force this type of property an either/or check box. I can recognize that it is commercial property, and that residence is a secondary or tertiary permitted use - with low or no feasibility; or even an interim use with little remaining economic life. And if residence is higher and better, so be it. But it is still not something I am going to know until I get the end of the same appraisal and same reportIt's just not that simple, even if you are a CG.
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