West Valley leads home-building growth, development follows

ABOUT THE PHOTO
Explosive growth in Glendale’s “New Frontier” along the Loop-303 in the West Valley includes a recent expansion of the Red Bull manufacturing facility.


By Catherine Reagor
The Arizona Republic/AZCentral.com


Despite COVID-19, new home sales and prices in metro Phoenix soared during the past few months.

To find more affordable new houses, more buyers are heading west to communities such as Buckeye, Goodyear, Avondale, west Phoenix and Surprise.

The Valley’s two most popular neighborhoods for new homebuyers are now in the West Valley.

The shift in growth from the East Valley to the West Valley isn’t new, but it’s growing. About 42% of all new metro Phoenix homes were built in the West Valley during the past year. That compares with 24% in the East Valley.

Ten years ago, the East Valley drew 34% of all new metro Phoenix homes, and the West Valley drew 28%.

More than 10 new subdivisions have opened for sales in the West Valley this year. Several new big communities from Mystic at Lake Pleasant Heights in Peoria to Alamar in Avondale are opening later this year.

It’s not just home building. Land sales for new apartment complexes and business parks on metro Phoenix's west side are climbing rapidly, too.

Developers are following the area’s new residents. More than 40% of metro Phoenix’s population is expected to live in the West Valley by 2030, according to the economic development group Westmarc.

Home building boom

Homebuyers signed contracts to buy 2,650 new Phoenix-area homes in August, according to Belfiore Real Estate Consulting.

That’s near the highest monthly level in more than a decade, which housing analysts partly attribute to pent up demand from buyers who sat out of the market during the early months of the novel coronavirus pandemic.

The median price of a new Valley house hit $325,000 in early September, up about $44,000 from last year, reports Belfiore.

South Buckeye posted the biggest increase in new home prices in metro Phoenix with a 12% jump during the past year. West Phoenix was second with an 11% increase.

Despite rising prices in the West Valley, 63% of new homes in the area sell below $350,000, according to the brokerage and research firm Land Advisors Organization. That compares with 55% Valleywide.

About 80% of existing homes in metro Phoenix’s West Valley sell below $350,000, compared with 69% for the entire Valley.

The top selling new home subdivision in metro Phoenix now is in Tartesso in north Buckeye, west of the White Tank Mountains. No. 2 for new home sales is west Phoenix’s Tuscano, according to Belfiore.

Sintra Hoffman, CEO of Westmarc, said though the West Valley has long been known for affordable homes, the area is now drawing more move up and second-home buyers.

The West Valley’s more diverse housing developments and growth in jobs are part of the shift, she said.

Other development follows rooftops

The West Valley’s growth is spurring demand for more rentals. The area has trailed Phoenix, Scottsdale and the East Valley for new apartment development.

But the apartments are coming. Land zoned to house about 34,000 apartments has sold in the West Valley since 2016, according to Land Advisors.

Employers want to be near new homes and apartments, particularly more affordable ones.

Microsoft, Amazon, Sub-Zero and Anderson Corp. are some of the big companies to expand in the West Valley during the past years. The area is also drawing more start ups, health care firms and retailers.

Overall, a record $1.24 billion in West Valley land has sold during the past 12 months, according to Land Advisors. That compares to $620 million in land sales in the area five years ago.

Greg Vogel, CEO of Land Advisors, said development of new business and industrial parks in the West Valley is at a peak, and the Loop 303 is a hot spot for those projects.

Investors and developers spent about $525 million on land zoned for industrial and commercial projects along the 303 during the past three years, according to Land Advisors.

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Glendale Economic Development